The Illustrated Natural History
The Illustrated Natural History
The Illustrated Natural History
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THE
ILLUSTRATED
NATURAL HISTORY.
BY T1IK
SEVENTH EDITION.
NEW YORK:
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
FRANKLIN SQUARE.
1*72.
PREFACE.
ject,
still there is at present no work of a popular character in
which accuracy of information and systematic arrangement are
united with brevity and simplicity of treatment.
All the best-known popular works on Natural History are
liable to many objections, among which may be named a want
of correct classification, the absence of explanations of the
signed expressly for the present work and the abilities of the
;
Order I. PRIMATES.
Family I. Hominidfle.
Geuius I. HOMO. Sapiens, Man.
Fam. II. Simiadaj.
TROGLODYTES. Niger, Chimpansee.
SIMIA. Satyrus, Orang-Outan,
HYLOBATES. Agilis, Agile Gibbon.
PRESBYTES. Larvatus, Kahau.
Entellus, Entcllus.
CYNOCEPIIALUS. Mormon, Mandrill.
Fam. III. Cebidaj.
ATELES. Paniscus, Coaita Snider Monkey.
MYCETES. Urslnus, Ursine Howl> r.
CALLITHRIX. Torquatus, Collared Tec Tee.
JACCHUS. Vulgaris, Marmoset.
.
Fam. IV. LemurTdoe.
LEMUR. Macaco, Ruffled Lemur.
Louis. Gracilis, Slender Loris.
Fam. V. Vespertilionidrc.
tiub-Fam. a. Phyllostonilna.
VAMPIRUS. Spectrum, Vampire.
Sub-fam. c. Vespertilionlna.
PLECUTUS. Aurltus, Long-eared Bat.
t ^ U i
SYSTEMATIC INDEX.
LEOPARDUS. Concolor, Puma.
Pardalis, Ocelot.
FELIS.
Domestica, Cat.
CARACAL. Melanotis, Caracal.
LYNCUS. Canadensis, Canada Lynx.
GUEPARDA. Jubata, Chetah.
Sub-fam. b. Hycenlna.
HY^NA. Striata, Striped Hyaena.
Sub-fam. c. Viverrlna.
VIVERRA. Civetta, Civet Cht.
GENETTA. Vulgaris, Genet.
HERPESTES. Ichneumon, Egyptian Ichneumon.
Sub-fam. d. Cant-no..
CAN is. Familiaris, Doc/.
Lupus, Wolf.
Aureus. Jackal.
VULPES. Vulgaris, Fox.
Sub-fam. c. Mustelina.
MARTES. Abiutum, Pine Marten.
Zibellina, Sable.
PUTORIUS.
Foetidus, Polecat.
MUSTELA. Erminea, Stoat.
Vulgaris, Weasel.
MELLIVORA. Ratel, Honey liatel.
GULO. Luscus, Glutton.
MELES. Vulgaris, Badger.
LUTRA. Vulgaris, Otter.
Fam. II. Ursidfe.
Sub-fam. Urslna.
a.
URSUS. Arctos, Bear.
Horribilis, Grizzly Bear.
THALARCTOS. Maritimus, Polar Bear.
Sub-fam. c. Procyonlna.
PROCYOX. Lotor, Racoon.
Sub-fam. d. Cercolcptlna.
NASUA. Fusca, Coati-mondL
CERCOLEPTES. Caudivolvulus, Kinkajou.
Fam. III. TalpidsB.
Sub-fam. a.
Talplna.
TALPA. Europsea, Mole.
Sub-fam. d. Erinacma.
SOREX. Araneus, Shrew.
Fodiens, Water Shrew.
ERINACEUS. Europceus, Hedgehog.
Fam. IV. Macropidte.
Sub-fam. b. Macroplna.
MACROPUS. Major, Kangaroo.
Sub-fam. e. Didelnhlna.
DIDELPHYS. Virginiana, Opossum.
SYSTEMATIC INDEX.
Fam. V. Phocida\
Sub-fain, b. P/ioclna.
PIJOCA. Vitulina, Seal.
MORUXGA. Proboscidea, Elephant Seal.
Sub-fam. c. Tricheclna.
TRICHECUS. Rosmarus, Walrus.
Fam. II.
Hystricida?.
Sub-fam. a. Hystriclna.
HYSTRIX. Crist ut a, Pcrcvpine.
Sub-fain, c. Dasyproctlna.
DASYPROCTA. Aguti, Agouti.
Sub-fam. d. Hydrochcerwa.
HYDROCHJERUS. Capybara, Cttpybara.
Fam. III. Leporidre.
LEPUS. Timidus, Hare.
Cuniculus, Rabbit.
Fam. IV. Jerboidae.
Sub-farn. a. ChinchiUlna.
CmxcniLLA. Laniger, Chinchilla.
Sub-fam. c.
Dip'ma.
Diprs. ^Esryptius, Jerboa.
Sub-fam. d. Myoxina.
MYOXUS. Avcllauaiius, Dormouse.
Sub-fam. c. Sciurlna.
SCIURUS. Europa?us, Sqi.iirrf-l.
PTEROMYS. Alplnus, PI win ij- Squirrel.
ARCTOMYS. MarmotlM. Marmot.
SYSTEMATIC INDEX.
Order V. UNGULATA.
Fam. I. Bovidre.
Sub-fam. a. Bovlna.
II. AVES.
Order I. A CCIP2TRES.
Sub-order I. ACCIPITRES-DIURXI.
Fam. I.
Gypaettdic.
GYPAETUS. Barbatu^, Ltimmergeycr.
Fam. II.
Sarcorharaphidtc.
SARCORHAMPHOS. Gryphon, Condor.
Papa, King Vulture.
Fam. III. YulturTdre.
Sub-fam. a. Vultitrlnce.
GYPS. Ful\-us, Griffin Vulture.
.
Apia.ster, Bee-cater.
SYSTEMATIC INDEX. x iii
-
Fam. II. Trocliilldfe.
TROCHILUS. Colubris, Ruby-throated Humminy-bird.
---
ORXISMYA. Gouldii, Gould's Hutn-mnuj-bird.
Sappho, Bar-tailea Humming-bird.
Cora, Cora Humming-bird.
Chrysolopha, Double-created Hnmm
biy-bird.
Sub-fam. . Ccrthliice.
CERTHIA. Familiaris, Creeper.
Sub-fain. 6. Slttlnce.
SITTA. Europcea, Nuthatch.
Sul^fam. c. Mcnurlrne.
TROGLODYTES. Parvulus, Wren.
Sub-fain, a.
CALAMODYTA. Locustella, Grasshopper Warbler.
-
LUSCIXIA.
SYLVIA.
-
rhilomt-la, Nightingale.
Uudiita, Dartford Warbler.
Cinerea, WhUethroat.
Atricapilla, Blackcap Warbler.
Rufa, Chi/-cha/.
'
--
PARUS. Major, Great Titmouse.
--
Sub-fam. e. Motacilllnw.
MOTACILLA.
AXTHUS.
Yarrellli, Pied Wagtail.
Flava, Yellow Wagtail.
Pratensis, Meadow Pipit.
--
TURDL'S. Viscivoras, Misseltoe Thrush.
Piluris, Fieldfare.
xiv SYSTEMATIC INDEX.
T URDUS. Musicus, Song-T/irnsk.
Merula, Blackbird.
ORPHEUS. Polyglottus, Mocking Bird.
Sub-fam. c. Oriollncc.
ORIOLUS. Galbula.
Fam. III. Muscicapidoe.
Sub-fam. a. Muscicaplncc.
MUSCICAPA. Grisola, Spotted Fly-catcher.
Fam. IV. Ampelido;.
Sub-fam. a. Atnpellncv.
AMPELIS. Garriilus, Bohemian Wax-wing.
Fam. V. Lanidfe.
Sub-fam. a. Lanlncc.
LANIUS. Excubitor, Great Gray Shrike.
Colluiio, Red-backed Shrike.
Sub-fam. c. Emberizlntc.
EMBERIZA. Citrinella, Yellow Bunting.
Sub-fam. f. Alaudlnce.
ALAUDA. Arvensis, Skylark.
Sub-farn. g. Pyrrhultnce.
PYRRHULA. Eubicilla, Bullfinch.
Sub-farn. //. Loxince.
LOXIA. Curvirostra, Crossbill.
Fam. YII. Bucerotida?.
BUCEROS. Rhinoceros, Rhinoceros Hornbill.
Order III. SCANSORE8.
Fain. I.
RhamphastTdffi.
Sub-fam. a. Rhamphastlnce.
RHAMPHASTOS. Toco, Toco Toucan.
Fam. II. Psittacidffl.
MACROCERCUS. Ararauna, Blue and Yellow Macaw.
PAL^EORXIS. Torquatus, Ringed Parrakect.
CACATUA. Sulpliurea, Great Sulphur Cockatoo.
Fam. III. Picidfc.
Sub-fam. c-. Piclna>.
Picus. Major, Great Spotted Woodpecker.
Yhidis, Green Woodpecker.
Sub-fam. y. Yunclnce.
YUNX. Torquilla, Wryneck.
Fam. IV. Cuculidso.
Sub fam. e. Cuadlnce.
CUCULUS. Canorus, Cuckoo.
Order IY. COLUNBJE.
Fam. I. Columblda?.
Sub-fam. 6. Columbines.
COLUMBA. Palumbus, Ringdove.
CEnas, Stockdove.
TURTUR. Auiitus, Turtle-dove.
ECTOPISTES. Migratoria, Passenger Pigeon.
Order Y. GALLlNjE.
Fam. III. Phasianida?.
Sub-fam. a. Pavonine.
PAVO. Cristatus, Peacock.
Sub-fam. b. PJtasianlncc.
ARGUS. Giganteus, Argus Pheasant.
PHASIANUS. Colchicus, Plicasant.
Sub-fam. c. Gallina,. *
GALLUS. Domestlcus, Domestic Fowl.
Sub-fam. d. Meleagrina.
MELEAGRIS. Gallopavo, Turkey.
XUMIDA. Meleagris, Guinea Fowl.
SYSTEMATIC INDEX.
Fain. IV. Tetraonidse.
Sub-fani. a. Perdicltwe.
PERDIX. Cinerea, Partridge.
COTURMX. Communis, Quail.
Sub-fam. b. Tetraonlnce.
TETRAO. Urogallus, Capcrcaillie.
Tetrix, Black Grouse.
LAGOPUS. Scoticus, Red Grouse.
Albus, Ptarmigan.
Fam. V. Megapodidre.
TALEGALLUS. Lathami, Brush Turkey.
MEGAPODIUS. Tumulus. Mound-making Magapode.
Order VI. STRUTHIONES.
Fam. I. Struthionidse.
Sub-fam. a. Struth.ionl.tioe.
STRUTHIO. Camelus, OstricJi.
CASUARIUS. Casoar, Cftssnw ..-/_/.
DROMAIUS. Novse-IIollanduu, Emu.
Sub-fam. b. Apteryglnce.
APTERYX. Australis, Apteryx.
Sub-fam. c. Didlnaz.
DIDUS. Tneptus, Dodo.
Sub-fam. d. Otince.
OTUS. Tarda, Bustard.
Sub-fam. c. Tr in glace.
PIIILOMACHUS. Pugnax, Ruff.
Fam. IV. Palamedeldte.
Sub-fam. a. Parrlnce.
PARRA. Jacana, Jacana.
Fam. V. Kallidse.
Sub-fam. a. Ralllnce.
ORYGOMETRA. Crex, Corncrake.
Sub-fam. b. Gallinullnie.
GALLIXULA. Chloropu*, Water Hen,
FULICA. Atra, Coot.
Tribe I. CYCLOSAURA.
Fam. IV. Lacertinidsc.
ZOOTOCA. Vivipara, Lizard.
Tribe II. GEISSOSAURA.
Fani. XV. ^cincidse.
ANGUIS. Fragilis, Blindworin.
Sub-order II. PACHYGLOSS^E.
OrderlV. EMYDOSAURI.
Fam. I. Crocodilidro.
CROCODILUS. Yulgaris, Crocodile.
Fam. II.Alligatorida?.
ALLIGATOR. Mississipensis, Alligator.
Class I Y. AMPHIBfA
Order I. EATRACUIA.
Sub-order I. SALIENT! A.
RANA. TemporarTa, Frog.
BUFO. A^ulgaris, Toad.
Order V. MEANT1A.
Fam. I. Proteadro.
PROTEUS. Angulnus, Proteus'.
Class Y. PISCES.
Sub-class I. PISCES OSSEI.
Order! ACANTHOPTERYGU.
Sub-order I. DACTYLOPHORI.
Fam. I. Triglidfe.
TRIGLA. Cuciilus, Gurnard.
Fam.
--
I.
Cypriuidfe.
CYPRINUS.
-- Carpio, Carp.
Barbus, Barbel.
Auratus, Gold-fish.
ABRAMIS. Brain a, Bream.
GOBIO. Fluviatilis, Gudgeon.
TIXCA. Vulgaris. Tench.
---
LEUCISCUS.
-- llutilus, -Roach.
Leuciscus, Dace.
Cephalus, Chub.
Fam. II. Esocidffl.
Esox. Lucius, Pike.
EXOCCETUS. Volitans, Flyincj-jish.
-
Fam. IV. Salmonidae.
SALMO. Salar, Salmon.
Fario, Trout.
-
Fam. V.
CUJPEA.
Clupeidffi.
ENGRAULIS.
Pilchardus, Pilchard.
Harengus, Herring.
Encrasicholus, Anchovy.
Sub-order I. ELEUTHEROPOMI.
Fam. I.Acipenserida
1
.
Order GASTEROPODA.
Sub-order PULMOBRAXCIIIATA.
Fam. Limacida 1
.
Fam. Cyprseidffl.
ARICIA. Moneta, Money Cowry.
Fam. Buccinidai.
BUCCINUM. Undatum, Whelk.
Fam. Muricidse.
MUREX. Tri.bu.lus, Thorny Woodcock.
Order CYCLOBRANCHIATA.
Fam. Patellidre.
PATELLA. Vulgata, Limpet.
Order CONCHIFERA.
Fain. Pectinidaa.
PECTEX. Jacobseus, Scallop.
OSTREA. Edulis, Oyster.
Fam. Meleagrinidse.
MELEAGRINA. Margaratifera, Pearl Oyster.
Fam. Mytilidse.
MYTILUS. Edulis, Edible Mussel.
Order CIRRHOPODA.
PENTALASMIS. Anatifera, Bernicle.
Order! COLEOPTERA.
Fam. Cicindelldsc.
CICIXDELA. Campcstris, Tiger-beetle.
Fam. Carabidai.
CARABUS. Cancellatus, Ground-beetle.
Fam. Silphidse. r
K"ECROPHAGUS. A espillo, Bury ing-beetle.
Fam. Lucanidae.
LUCAXUS. Cervus, Stag-beetle.
GEOTRUPES. Stercoraiius, Dor-beetle.
MELOLOXTHA. Vulgaris, Cockchafer.
Fam. Lampyridre.
LAMPYRIS. jS'octiluca, Glowworm.
Fam. Ptinidae.
AXOBIUM. Tesselatum, Death-ioatch.
Fam. Cerambycida\
CERAMBYX. Moschatus, Musk-beetle.
Fam. Staphylinidtc.
CREOPIIILUS. Maxillosus, Rove-beetle.
Order I! DERMAFTER A.
FORFICULA. Auriculaiia, Earwig.
Order III. ORTHOPTERA.
Fam. !ocustidoc.
LOCUSTA. Tartanca, Locust.
Fam. Achetida?.
GRYLLOTALPA. Vulgaris, Mole Cricket.
PHYLLIA. Foliata, Leaf Insect.
Order V. TRICHOPTERA.
Fam. PhryganidsB.
PHRYGANEA. Grandis, Caddis-jly.
Order I. LEPIDOPTERA.
Fam. Papilionidse.
PAPILIO. Machaon, Swallow-tailed Butterfly.
ARGYNNIS. Adippe, Silver-spotted Fritillary.
VANESSA. Atalauta, Red Admiral.
Fam. SphingidsB.
ACHEROXTIA. Atropos, Deatlts-hcad Moth.
Fam. Ai'ctiadw.
ARCTIA. Cnja, T'xjer Moth.
Fam. Geometridaj.
OURAPTERYX. Sambucai'Ta, Swallow-tailed Moth.
Fam. Alucitida?..
ALUCITA. Heixadactyla, Many-plumed Moth.
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BOSJESMAN AND LIOX.
Species I.
Sapiens (Lat. wise), Man.
the dog flies from a recently flayed tiger skin with no less fear
than if the living tiger stood before him. On the contrary,
the power of man's reason enables him to alter his habits and
actions according to the change of external circumstances.
The same man can inhabit the burning sands of the tropics,
or the everlasting snows of the north pole and is able to ;
which each is
placed. Let each be transplanted into the
country of the other, and in a few generations we should find
the Bosjesman civilized, and capable of reading how his former
superior, now sunk into the savage state, gains a precarious
subsistence by hunting, and passes his life in caves.
Some have ventured so far as to assert that the
theorists
read a sealed letter with the point of his toe, or to examine the
interior of a friend some hundred miles distant ;
it is difficult
skin soft, and the features are more like European features
than those of the Negro. This race inhabits the north-eastern
portion of Africa, including Southern Egypt, part of Nubia,
and part of Abyssinia a few detached spots toward the
;
But why then did the line break ? Whereupon the man,
according to the prevailing system of argument in those
countries, and perhaps in a few others, threatened to knock
him down if he abused the gods any more. Most nations
have dim notions of a deluge which overwhelmed the whole
world, and from which only a few individuals escaped, by
whom the earth was repeopled. Nearly all believe in a
good and an evil power continually at warfare, and that the
good will finally subclue the evil. Many savage nations, in
consequence, seek to propitiate the evil power with prayers and
offerings, feeling sure that the good one will not injure them.
All nations (except one or two, such as the abject Bosjes-
man, who can form no idea of what he cannot see, and whose
answer when told of a God, is " Let me see him") believe in
a future state. Their belief is
invariably modified according
to their habits. Some of the debased dark races believe that
after death they become white men and have plenty of
money ;
the Mahometan
considers his paradise as an abode
of everlasting sensual indulgence the savage believes that
;
grows in stature.
SKULL OF MAN.
12 NATURAL HISTORY.
THE ORANG-OUTAN.
The ORANG-OUTAN inhabits Borneo and Sumatra. In Borneo
there are certainly two species of orang, called by the natives
the Mias-kassar and the Mias-pappan. Some naturalists sup-
pose that the Sumatran orang is also a distinct species.
This is the largest of all the apes, as it is said that orangs
have been obtained from Borneo considerably above five feet
in height. The strength of this animal is tremendous a ;
rattled about our ears, was broken by their weight, and not
thrown, as some persons represent. If pushed to extremity,
however, the pappan could not be otherwise than formidable ;
thrown to her while in the air, she would catch them with-
out discontinuing her course. She kept up a succession of
springs, hardly touching the branches in her progress, con-
tinually uttering a musical but almost deafening cry. She
was very tame and gentle, and would permit herself to be
touched or caressed. The height of the Gibbon is about three
feet, and the reach of the extended arms about six feet.
The young Gibbon is usually of a paler colour than its parent.
There are several species of Gibbon, amongst which some
NATURAL HISTORY. 17
shape of its nose, and the natives relate that while leaping
it holds that organ with its paws, apparently to guard it
^SMES&Y':
-
'
Paniscus (Gr. Havicicof, dim. of TTUV, a little Pan), tlic Coaita Spider
Monkey.
* Frrnn'inco ~Kfl>irla>.
NATURAL HISTORY. 21
Monkeys are said to use this member for hooking out objects
where a hand could not be inserted. The tail is of considerable
use in climbing among the branches of trees they coil it
;
Monkeys.
The genus Cebus is omitted.
insects, and fruits. Its habits are, apparently, mild and in-
offensive, but its acts belie its looks, for when a small bird is
presented to it, it springs upon its prey like a cat and speedily
devours it.
v
JACCHUS. (Gr. la/i x\'or, Bacchus.)
* The beautiful little marmoset in the Zoological Gardens ate a great number of
flies which I
caught and presented to it. Its little eyes sparkled with eagerness each
time that it saw my hand moving towards a fly settled out of its reach.
24 NATURAL HISTORY.
Family IV. Lcmimdrc. (La(. Icmurcs, ghosts Ghostlike.)
LOT? IS.
^Ntoo^
Family V. . .
Vespertiliomdre. Lat vcspcrtilio, a bat. Bat kind.)
Sub-family a. Phyllostonnna. (Gr. $v/J*ov, a leaf; crro/za,
a mouth.)
c.
Sub-family Ve&pertilionina.
THE LION.
The LION
stands at the head of the wild beasts. His noble
and dignified bearing, the terrific power compressed into his
comparatively small frame, and the deep majesty of his voice,
have gained for him the name of
"
king of beasts." The Lion
inhabits Africa and certain parts of Asia, such as portions of
Arabia and Persia, and some parts of India. It varies in
appearance according to the locality, but there is little doubt
that there is but one species. "We are indebted to Mr. Gumming
for many interesting notices of this noble animal, observed
"
One of the most striking things connected with the Lion
is his voice, which extremely grand and peculiarly striking.
is
*
Some years since, one of the keepers at Wombwell's placed a pair of lion cubs
in my arms. They were rather larger than cats, and almost unpleasantly playful.
22 - NATURAL HISTORY.
near her den. Her mate also ably seconds her endeavours,
and has been known to keep the hunters at bay until she has
withdrawn her cubs to a place of safety, after which he bounds
offin the direction which she has taken.
The lion when young is
easily tamed, and shows a strong
attachment to its keeper. Thosewho have seen Van Amburgh
will know what influence man may obtain over this powerful
creature. Many anecdotes have been told of the celebrated
"
lion Nero," who would suffer even strangers to caress him,
and carry children on back with the greatest good-nature.
his
,* v><\/j>~>^5^\^, \ ;i
V
~
mm,
Indian Islands. A
black variety inhabits Java, and is not
uncommon there. Its height is about two feet. This and the
following Felidse are accustomed to live much on trees, and
are on that account called Tree-tigers by the natives. Nothing
can be more beautiful than the elegant and active manner in
which the leopards sport among the branches of the trees :
at one time they will bound from branch to branch with such
I.EOPAF.DU3.
wavy stripes, and the head is adorned with black spots. The
general colour is a yellowish grey.
It is easy to distinguish the Ounce from the Leopard, by
the indistinctiveness of the markings, and also by the rough-
ness of the fur, which latter distinction, in the opinion of
some naturalists, shows that it lives in mountainous regions.
The habits and history of this animal are but little known.
NATURAL HISTORY. 37
LEOPARDUS.
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LEOPAUDl'S.
"
similarity of colour is the reason that the name concolor"
has been given to it. It lives much on trees, and usually lies
LEOPARDUS.
THE CAT.
CATS' TAINS.*
Melandtis (Gr. ,
black ; oi>f, an ear), the Caracal.
* 1. Tail of Domestic Cat. Tail of Wild Cat.
,2.
NATURAL HISTORY. 43
THE CHETAIL
The CHETAH, or HUNTING LEOPARD,as it is sometimes
called, isone of the most elegant and graceful animals known.
It is a native both of Africa and India, but it is
only in the
latter country that it is used for hunting game, as the Africans
enough, the hunter takes the band from its eyes, and directs
its head towards the game. Directly the Qhetah sees the
deer, it creeps ofF the cart, and makes towards them as rapidly
and silently as it can. carefully availing itself of the accidental
cover of a bush, or stone, precisely as a cat does when stealing
after a bird. When it has succeeded in unobservedly ap-
proaching the unsuspecting herd, it makes two or three
tremendous springs, and fastens on the back of one unfortu-
nate deer, brings it to the ground, and waits until its keeper
GUEPAURA.
b. Hyenina.
Sub-family
HY.ENA. (Gr.
VIVERRA.
Ichneumon (Gr. ,
a tracker), the Egyptian Ichneumon,
THE DOG.
We now arrive at the DOG FAMILY, which includes the
Dogs, Wolves, Jackals, and Foxes. The first of the Dogs is
the Kolsun, or Dhale, which inhabits Bombay and Nepaul.
It hunts in packs, as most of the dogs do even in a wild
seeing the child, that it was his own. He offered a large sum
for the noble creature, but his master refused to part with him
on any terms.
CAN IS.
THE BLOODHOUND.
THE FOXHOUND.
- -
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^t: --
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:" ^-^' "-3>
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THE BEAGLE.
returning in their panniers after the day's sport, the keeper was
decoyed away by some stratagem, and when he returned, his
dismay was great to find that the dogs, panniers, and horse were
all missing. No traces of them were discovered, and it was
conjectured that they must have been sold on the Continent.
It is a common custom in the military schools and sometimes
at the universities, to follow the beagle on foot.
NATURAL HISTORY.
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THE POINTER.
fastened among the stones of the wall, and was unable to ex-
tricate herself. But, on coming up to her, they found that this
singular circumstance proceeded from her caution, lest she
should flush the birds, and thus suspended herself in place of
completing her leap.
NATURAL HISTORY. 55
THE MASTIFF.
THE BULL-DOG.
always safe even for him to disturb it. This dog was exten-
sively used in the cruel sport of bull-baiting, a recreation now
extinct. When opposed to the bull, the dog would fly at
its nose, and there hang in spite of all the infuriated animal's
struggles. So firm is its hold, that the owner of a bull-dog
laid a wager that when his dog had seized a bull he would
cut off all his feet in succession without inducing the poor
beast to loose his hold. The experiment was made, and the
cruel master, who deserved a similar fate himself, won his
wager. .
" "
passage : Man," said he, is the god of the dog he knows ;
obeys him His whole soul is wrapt up in his god all the
! !
THE GREYHOUND.
THE WOLF.
Ferocity, craft,and cowardice, are the well-known traits
of the WOLF. Although one of the dog tribe, it is held in
utter abhorrence 'by the domesticated dogs. The stronger
pursue and destroy it, the weaker fly from it in terror. In
the earlier part of English history it is frequently mentioned
as a common and dreaded pest. It was finally extirpated in
'
chase the hare, for too swift for him, or the rabbit, as it
it is
nearly an hour after the ibx has passed. Partly on this ac-
count, and partly on account of its speed, endurance, and cun-
ning, the chase of the fox is one of the most admired English
sports. Many tales are related of its cunning when pursued,
such as driving another fox out of home, and forcing it to
its
The SABLE, long famous for its costly fur, which is thought
worthy adorn the coronation robes of a monarch, inhabits
to
Siberia. The chase, or rather the search, after these animals
is attended with dreadful hardships and great danger. Some-
times a sable will not be seen ibr days sometimes the bait of
;
this respect differs from the fur of other animals. The skins
are very valuable, varying from one to ten pounds in price,
according to the quality.
MARTES.
"
The POLECAT, fommard," as the farm-
fitchet, foulmart, or
ers call it, is
very common
most parts of England. It is
in
dreadfully destructive to the poultry, and destroys both old
and young. William Howitt relates an interesting anecdote of
his dog unearthing a polecat, and afterwards bringing out of
its hole an entire brood of ducklings that had most unaccounta-
The FERRET is
supposed to be a domesticated variety of
the polecat, and a mixed breed is
generally preferred by
rat-catchers, who use the ferret, first muzzling it carefully,
to drive the rats out of their holes, when
they are either
struck down with sticks, or killed by terriers, who keep a
sharp watch for them. The hair, called Fitch, is much used
for making paint brushes.
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bite is terrific, and its skin so tough, and hair so thick, that
the bites of the dog do not take full effect. The pleasure of
"
this sport," as in many other diversions of the sporting
world, appears to consist in trying whether the dogs or the
badger will be most mangled in a given time.
Its skin is rather valuable, the hair being extensively em-
THE OTTER.
The OTTER seems same part in the water as
to play the
the polecat and the other weasels on the land. Like the pole-
cat, it is excessively rapacious like the polecat, it destroys
;
only ea's the brain and sucks the blood, so the other daintily
eats the flakes at the back of the fish's neck, and leaves the
remainder for less fastidious animals. In Scotland, where the
otter abounds, it is not uncommon to find a large fish, such
NATURAL HISTORY. 71
body, it glides to the surface and ascends the bank with almost
the same motion. "While below the surface it bears a great
resemblance to the seal, the method in which it disposes its
hind-feet greatly assisting the effect. Its rapid and
easy
movements in the water are mostly performed by the assistance
of its
powerful tapering tail.
Otter hunting is a very favourite sport in Scotland, where
almost every stream is furnished with its otter. At the sight
of the footsteps of the animal the population round is in a
commotion, the dogs are assembled, guns and spears provided,
and the hunters go out in sufficient numbers and with suffi-
cient arms to kill a tiger ;
and from all accounts it is quite as
difficult an animal to
destroy; for by diving, and biting, and
hiding among stones, added to its great tenacity of life, it gives
the hunters no little trouble to secure it.
Theotter is easily tamed, and its
predatory habits turned
to account, as it is sometimes trained to catch fish and
bring
them to shore, precisely as the falcon is trained to catch
terrestrial game.
Several genera arc omitted.
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;
Sub-family a. Urslna.
URSUS.
&c., who walk with merely their paws or toes. All the bears
are omnivorous, that is, they can eat either animal or vegetable
food,* so that a leg of mutton, a pot of honey, a potato, or an
apple, are each equally acceptable.
The Brown Bear inhabits the north of Europe, Switzerland,
and the Pyrenees. It has been extirpated from England for
many centuries, but is recorded to have been found in Scot-
land so late as 1057. The inhabitants of Northern Europe
hunt it with much skill, and take it in traps and pitfalls,
availing themselves of its love for honey. It is said that there
exists a practice of placing the hive in a tree, and planting
long spikes round its foot. A
heavy log of wood is then sus-
NATURAL HISTORY. 73
ponded by a cord just before the entrance of the hive, and the
trap is complete. The bear scents the honey and comes to
look at the tree. The spikes rather astonish him, but he
sniffs his way through them, and commences the ascent.
When he has reached the hive, he is checked by the log hang-
ing before the entrance : this he finds is movable, and pushes
aside, but it is just so long that a mere push will not entirely
remove it, so he gives it a tremendous pat, and looks in at
the entrance. Just as he has succeeded in putting his nose
to the hive, the log returns and hits him very hard on the
head. This makes him exceedingly angry, and he pokes it
away harder than ever, only to return with a more severe blow
than before. He now has a regular fight with the log, hitting
it first to one side and then to the other, the
perverse block
invariably striking his head every time, until at last a severer
blow than usual knocks him fairly off the tree on to the spikes
below.
In the time of Queen Elizabeth the bear used to be baited,
but this cruel sport is now happily extinct.
Two genera are omitted.
rusrs.
THE RACOON.
The RACOON an inhabitant of Canada and other paiis of
is
man who could grin the bark off gum trees, and the swift
7G NATURAL HISTORY.
Indian, who could run so fast round a tree that he sometimes
saw his own back.
The food of the Racoon is principally small animals and
Sub-family c. Procyoahui.
PROCYOX. (f-Tr. Hpoitvuv, a constellation.)
Sub-family d. Cercolcptiria.
KASUA. (Lat. from nasus, a no.-:o.)
up. The nostrils are placed on a sort of disk at the end of the
snout, and give the whole head a most extraordinary aspect.
The Coatis live upon birds, eggs, insects, and worms, and some-
times they will eat roots. They are nocturnal in their habits,
spending most of the day in sleep, rolled up in a ball. In de-
scending a tree they walk with their heads downwards, like the
cat, which, however, they surpass in activity. These animals
inhabit the warmer parts of America, but do not appear to be
much sought after by hunters. The Brown Coati-mondi is the
species represented there is another species, the Red Coati.
;
THE KIXKAJOU.
The KINKAJOU is also an inhabitant of Southern America.
It is not unlike the Coati in its habits, but is more active, as
ing out any insects that may be lying concealed beyond the
reach of its
paws. The Spanish missionaries give it the name
of Honey Bear, because it is a great devastator of the nests of
the wild bee, using its long tongue to lick the honey out
of the cells. When in captivity it is very tame and gentle,
and will play with an acquaintance as a cat will. It displays
great address in capturing flies and other insects with its
tongue, and it is amusing to watch how its eyes gleam directly
that a fly settles within its reach. During the earlier part of
the day it will not move, but towards dusk it becomes very
brisk and animated, climbing about its cage, and swinging from
the top bars by its tail and hind paws.
A
sub-family is omitted.
THE MOLE.
MANY ridiculous stories of the MOLE and its habits may be
found in several authors, among whom .ZEsop stands very con-
spicuous. This much maligned animal is said to be deprived
of eyes, to undergo unheard-of tortures in forcing its way
through the earth, and to spend a life of misery in subter-
ranean damp and darkness. So far from being a miserable
animal, the Mole seems to enjoy its life quite as much as any
other creature. It is beautifully fitted for the station which
NATURAL HISTORY. 7D
TALPA.
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NATURAL HISTORY.
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false reports, and have been treated with great cruelty on ac-
count of those fables. Rustics formerly believed that the poor
little harmless creature
paralyzed their cattle by running over
them, and that the only way to cure the diseased animal was
to place a
bough of shrew-ash on the injured part. The
shrew-ash was made by boring a hole into an ash-tree, and
then plugging up in the hole a living shrew-mouse. By the
same process of reasoning a shrew cut in half, and placed on a
wound supposed to be caused by its bite, was considered a cer-
tain remedy.
82 NATURAL HISTORY.
The Water Shrew frequents brooks and clear running ditch-
1
WATER SHREW.
speckled over its entire surface with silver, from the bubbles
of air which adhere to its fur. It eats the grubs of various
aquatic insects, digging them out of the muddy banks with its
snout. It is not common, but I have seen numbers of
very
them inhabiting a brook near Little Hinton in Wiltshire, and
often watched their elegant movements and gambols through
the water.
One or two genera are omitted.
SPIXE OF HEDGEHOG.
p-t NATURAL HISTORY.
Family V. . .
Macropitkc. (Gr. Ma/cpof, -long; TTOV^, a foot.)
Sub -family b.
Macropina.
MACROPUS.
the mole we saw that the power of the body was placed
Iii
of progression is
by immense leaps from its long liind legs
assisted by its tail. The length of each leap is about fifteen
feet. Of course this swiftness -would soon leave its pursuers
behind, but the Australian is able to break cue of its limbs
or strike it insensible to the ground with his boomerang, the
most wonderful weapon that uncivilized man ever produced.
This extraordinary missile is a fiat curved piece of wocd, which
the Australian natives can wield with wonderful skill, making
it describe circles in the air, cr rush at an object, and then
Sub-family c.
Dldelpldna. (Gr. A/V, double; <5eA^%, a pouch.)
DIDELPHY5.
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do, that is, making it a support for its young, who sit on its
back and twist their tails round their mother's in order to
prevent them from falling off. Lawson, in a passage quoted
in the Museum of Animated Nature, gives the following quaint
"
account of this animal a cat has nine lives this creature
: If
surely has nineteen for you break every bone in their skin,
;
if
and mash their skull, leaving them for dead, you may come an
hour after, and they will be quite gone away, or, perhaps, you
may meet them creeping away. I have lor necessity in the
wilderness eaten of them. Their flesh is very white and well-
tasted but their ugly tails put me out of conceit with that
;
fare."
The length
of the Opossum is about twenty-two inches, and
itsheight about that of an ordinary cat. \\hen disturbed or
alarmed, it gives out a very unpleasant odour.
Several genera are omitted.
PllOCA.
they frequent, but the older and stronger animals are shot or
knocked down with clubs when they attempt to scramble into
the sea, as a blow on the nose instantly disables them.
The fore-feet of the Seal are used as fins, and the two hinder
feet almost as the tail of a fish, to assist and direct its course.
On land the movements of this animal are very clumsy it ;
by soin3 wild seals and did not return again. A young seal
was tarn 3 A by the guard of a small island in the Frith of
Forth above Edinburgh. It seemed quite to consider itself
one of tli 3 party, would accompany their boat across the
water, and when the vessel was made fast, it used to take its
station inside, and watch until the owners returned. It had
the playful manners of a water-dog, and would snatch a stick
from its mister's hand and dash into the sea with it, where it
would toss and tumble about, sometimes approaching close
to the shore, and swimming off again when its master attempted
to grasp the stick, but it invariably brought back whatever it
had taken. It would also bring fish out of the water and give
them to its owners.
The length of the Common Seal is about four or five feet,
and itsweight often two hundred and twenty-four pounds.
When surprised basking on the shore, it scrambles off towards
the water ;
but if intercepted, dashes at its antagonist, oversets
him if possible, and makes its escape as fast as it can.
NATURAL HISTORi r.3
MOF.UXGA.
'
;
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of this seal is also very valuable for its strength, and is used in
making harness. The seal skin is often used as fur.
It is a
migratory animal and changes its residence several
times in the year, the first migration taking place in June.
There are many seals known, among which are the Sea
Leopard, a spotted species the Harp Seal, so called from the
;
Sub-family c. Trichecina.
THE "WHALE.
THE CETACEA, or WHALE tribe, closely resemble the fishes,
and have often been placed among these animals by natu-
ralists. They, however, are distinguished by possessing warm
blood, andin consequence, being forced to rise at intervals in
order to breathe the air, instead of separating from the water,
by means of their gills, sufficient air for supporting life.
The great Greenland Whale is found in the Northern
Oceans, living amid ice and perpetual cold. Many ships are
annually fitted out for the capture of this creature, which,
unhappily for itself, furnishes oil and whalebone. The oil
is obtained from the thick
layer of fatty substance called
blubber, which lies immediately under the skin and the ;
acts as a sieve for the Whale to strain his food through. The
throat of the Greenland Whale is very small indeed, and its
food consists of a little creature ahout an inch and a half
long, called Clio borealis. The "Whale, when it wishes to
feed, rushes through the water with its immense jaws wide
open, enclosing a host of little sea animals, and a few hogs-
heads of water. As the Whale only wants the animals, and
not the water, it shuts its mouth, and drives all the water out
BAL.EXA.
ing over the side of the ship, furnished ready for action,
are instantly manned and lowered into the water, and the
boat springs off in chase of the whale. The harpooner, whose
station is in the bow, examines his implements carefully, tries
the edge of the harpoon, and sees that the rope is
properly
an entanglement would probably upset the boat, or
coiled, as
even drag it below water. It will be as well
just 1o notice
the different weapons used in the whale-fishery. The first
and most important is the harpcon, a kind of spear with a
large barbed head, the shape of which is not very unlike the
flukes of an anchor. The edges of the barbs are kept very
sharp, as otherwise the harpoon would not penetrate beyond
the blubber, and the whale would consequently escape. The
head of the harpoon is not made of steel, as most would
imagine, but of soft iron, so soft that it can be scraped to an
edge with a knife. This is fixed to a wooden handle, by
which the harpooner holds it. In some vessels the harpoon
is fired at the whale from a small cannon
placed in the bow
of the boat. There are some very ingenious harpoons in the
United Service Museum, one of which, intended to be fired
from a gun, has its barbs joined to the head by a hinge, and
held apart with a spring, so that when a whale is struck the
barbs collapse until the ibrce of the blow is expended, when
the spring expands them and holds the 'whale firmly. The
common harpoon, however, is the weapon usually employed.
To the harpoon is fastened a long and very tough line,
about 4,000 iect in length. This line is coiled up at the
head of the boat, and great care is taken to prevent it from
It runs over a kind of
being entangled. pully, as the friction
is so great when the alarmed whale starts off, that the rope
when out of place has repeatedly set the gunwale of the
its
boat on fire. A
bucket of water is therefore always kept at
hand to throw on the rope. At Deptford, some years back,
might be seen a boat, the head of which had been quite cut
oil
by the rope. When a whale is struck it sometimes runs
out with the whole of the line, in which case the line cf
94 NATURAL HISTORY.
another boat is fastened to it, and sometimes a whale has
carried off three miles of line with it.
does not enter deep, and causes the animal but little incon-
venience, as a whale has often broken its line and escaped
with the harpoon sticking in its back, and been afterwards
recaptured, apparently none the worse for its adventure. In
order to kill the whale the fishermen have another weapon,
"
called a lance." This is a long, slender, steel weapon, with
a very sharp head, without barbs, as the men have to with-
draw the lance as fast as they can after it has pierced a vital
part. With these few and simple weapons the fishers contrive
to secure the monster of the waters a beautiful instance of
the superiority of reason over brute strength for as the expert
;
angler secures a large and strong fish with a single hair, utterly
inadequate to bear half the weight of the creature it holds, so
the whale-fisher, with a few small weapons, achieves a task
which may be compared to a mouse attacking and killing a
w.olf reel of thread and a crochet needle.
with a
Theboats always approach the whale from behind, lest
the expected prey should see them and escape. When within
a few yards the harpooner throws his weapon at the Avhale,
so as to pierce through the mass of blubber, and hold fast in
the flesh. The wounded animal instantly dashes off, taking
the line with it. When it has been under water for some
time, it is forced to come to the surface to breathe. The
fishers mark the place where it rises, and thrust their long
lances deep into its body, inflicting mortal wounds. Blood
mixed with water is now discharged from the whale's nostrils
or "blow-holes," a sure sign that it will soon die. Presently
streams of blood are thrown up, colouring the sea and fre-
quently drenching the crews of the boats, and after a few
violent struggles the whale turns over on its side and dies.
The enormous carcass is now joyously towed to the ship,
and preparations are made for "flensing," or cutting off the
useful parts. Strong ropes are attached to the head and tail,
and me i wearing shoes armed with spikes, to prevent slipping,
coinme.ice the process by fastening ropes to its head and tail.
A stron i hook is then fixed into the fat near the neck, called
" "
the Lent," as it is used for kenting," or turning the
*
NATURAL HISTORY. 95
its mouth wide open, and accidentally caught the line between
the rope which was the cause of its alarm so firmly between
its lips as to produce the effect just This circum-
stated.
stance took place many years ago, but a similar one occurred
in the year 1814."*
The dangers undergone in this pursuit are very great.
Sometimes the boat is dashed to pieces by a blow from the tail of
the enraged
o whale sometimes the crew are left on the ice for
;
*
*
ScorcRt'y's Arctic Regions, vol. ii. p. CC4.
NATURAL HISTORY. 97
THE CACHALOT.
The chase of the CACHALOT is similar to that of the
Greenland whale, and need not be described. It is attended
with more danger, as the terrific row of teeth with which
the lower jaw of the Cachalot is armed, is not
unfrequently
employed in biting the boat. In the Ashmolean Museum at
Oxford is an under jaw-bone of this whale, sixteen and a half
feet in containing teeth. Besides
length, forty-eight huge
this method of defence, it has a very unpleasant habit of
E
98 NATURAL HISTORY.
Spermaceti Whale.
Family II.
Delphinidae. (Gr. AfP.<^f, a Dolphin. Dolphin kind.)
DELPIIINUS. (Lat. a Dolphin.)
-
.-
-.
brought him on deck, is only black and white, and all the
change that he makes, is that the black becomes brown in
time, and the white grey.
We will leave poetry and its beautiful errors, and pass on to
facts. The Dolphin is, like the whale, a warm-blooded animal,
suckles its young, and is forced to come to the surface in order
to breathe. Its snout is very long, and is apparently used for
J -
,
^-
THE NARWHAL.
Mr?.
"
Its rapacity knows no bounds, while its increase is pro-
digious, beyond all belief. But the most singular part of its
history is, that it has nearly worried every individual of the
original rat of Great Britain. So scarce have these last-men-
tioned animals become, that in all rny life I have never seen
but one single solitary specimen. It was sent some few years
"
Having caught one of them in a box trap, I dipped its hinder
parts into warm tar, and then turned it loose behind the hollow
* Waterton's
Essays, p. 212.
NATURAL HISTORY. 105
.
pate.
When a board of long standing is taken up in a room, it is not
uncommon to find under it a mouse's nest, composed of rags,
string, paper, shavings,
and everything that the ingenious little
"
But what annoyed him far more than our poking him up
with a stick, or tantalizing him with shins of beef or legs of
mutton, was introducing a mouse into his cage. No fine lady
ever exhibited more terror at the sight of a spider than this
magnificent royal tiger betrayed on seeing a mouse. Our
mischievous plan was to tie the little animal by a string to the
end of a long pole, and thrust it close to the tiger's nose. The
moment he saw it, he leaped to the opposite side and when ;
the mouse was made to run near him, he jammed himself into
a corner, and stood trembling and roaring in such an ecstasy of
fear that we were always obliged to desist from sheer pity
to the poor brute. Sometimes we insisted on his passing
over the spot where the unconscious little mouse ran back-
wards and forwards. For a long time however we could not
get him to move, till at length, I believe by the help of a
squib, we obliged him to start but instead of pacing leisurely
;
HAIR OF MOUSE.
is raised about a foot and a half from the ground, and sup-
It is made of grass, about the
ported on two or three straws.
size of a cricket-ball, and very compact.
The FIELD MOUSE is as great a pest in the open air as the
Common Mouse within a house. It not only devours the
corn, but strips the bark off young trees, doing great mischief.
The kestrel or windhover hawk lives almost exclusively on the
Field Mouse, and ought always to be encouraged.
Several genera are omitted.
Sub-family b. Arvlcolina.
ing the green bark from reeds, which they completely strip,
leaving the mark of each tooth as they proceed. I shot one
while feeding, and at first thought that the marks of its teeth
were caused by the shot, for until that time I had supposed that
the Water Rat fed on fish.
THE BEAVER.
North America is the
principal country where the BEAVER
isfound, but it is also common on the Euphrates, and along
some of the larger European rivers, as the Rhone and the
Danube. In former years, when the wolf and bear inhabited
England, the Beaver followed its architectural pursuits along
the rivers but they have riot been seen in this country since
;
1188.
NATURAL HISTORY. 109
give with that member when they dive. In order that their
pond may not be too deep, they always leave an opening in
the dam to let the water escape when it rises above a certain
height.
They cut most of their wood in the summer, taking care to
choose trees above their houses, so that the stream floats them
down to the place where they wish to use them. They also
lay up stores of food for the winter, by cutting a number of
green branches and sinking them near the door of their habita-
tions, where they are held firm by stones laid on the summit
of the heap.
During the severe winter, their mud-built houses freeze quite
hard, and prevent the wolverine, their greatest enemy except
man, from breaking through and devouring the inmates.
The fur of the Beaver is exceedingly valuable, especially for
the manufacture of hats, and is greatly sought after. The
hunting season is in winter, when the beavers are quietly in
their houses. The hunters, armed with spears, &c. break the
tops of the house;. The alarmed beavers instantly rush out
and pass under the ice to certain hiding-places in the bank.
The hunter then discovers the position of the hole in the bank
by the sound of his spear struck against the ice he then ;
breaks a hole and spears the animal in its place of fancied se-
curity. A substance called Castor was formerly obtained
from the Beaver and much used in medicine, but is now dis-
carded.
When in captivity the Beaver soon becomes tame, and
will industriously build dams across the corner of a room
with brushes, boots, fire-irons, books, or any thing it can find.
When its edifice is finished it sits in the centre apparently sat-
isfied it has made a beautiful structure to dam up the
that
river a proof that the ingenuity of the Beaver is not caused
by reason but by instinct.
The fur of the Beaver, like that of many other animals, con-
sists of a fine wool intermixed with long and stiff hairs. The
hairs are useless, but the of the fur causes
peculiar construction
it to
penetrate and fix itself into the felt which forms the body
of a hat. The length of the Beaver is about three feet and a
half.
Several genera are omitted.
NATURAL HISTORY. Ill
IIYSTRIX.
c.
Sub-family Daxyproctina.
d. Hydrochcerina.
Sub-family
constantly hunted both for the sport and for its flesh. "When
hunted with greyhounds, the amusement is called coursing.
Beagles are also used, but they do not catch the Hare by speed,
but by patiently following its track, until the wearied animal is
no longer capable of escaping. It comes under the denomina-
tion of game, and is protected by the Game Laws, as are pheas-
ants and partridges.
It is exceedingly like the rabbit, but its colour is slightly
different, and the black spot on the extremity of its ears is a
simple method of distinguishing it. The Hare does not burrow
like the rabbit, but makes a kind of nest of grass and other
"
materials. In this nest, called a form," the Hare lies, and
trusting to its concealment will often remain quiet until the
foot of an intruder almost touches it.
Many people can distin-
guish it
by the sparkle of its eye.
NATURAL HISTORY. 115
LEPUS.
CHINCHILLA.
c.
Sub-family Dipina.
Grain and bulbous roots are its chief food while eating, it
;
holds the food with its fore paws, and sits upright on its
haunches, like the squirrels and marmots. The Jerdoa does
not bear confinement well it
always appears uneasy and
;
tawny yellow.
THE DORMOUSE.
The DORMOUSE is very common in all the warmer parts
of the Continent, and is often found in England, especially
in the southern and midland counties. It lives in copses
and among brushwood, through which it makes its way with
such rapidity that it is very difficult to capture. During the
winter it lies torpid, but takes care to have a stock of food
laid up, on which it feeds during the few interruptions to 'its
slumbers. A warm day in winter will usually rouse it, but
NATURAL HISTORY. 119
Sub-family d Myoxina.
THE SQUIRREL.
The SQUIRREL is a very common animal in woods, where
numbers may be seen frisking about on the branches, or
running up and down the trunks. If alarmed, it springs up
the tree with
extraordinary activity, and hides behind a branch.
By this trick it escapes its enemy the hawk, and by constantly
slipping behind the large branches, frequently tires him out.
The activity and daring of this little animal are extraordinary.
When pursued, it makes the most astonishing leaps from branch
to branch, or from tree
to tree, and has some method
apparently
of altering its direction while in the air,
possibly by means of
its tail
acting as a rudder.
120 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family c. Sciurina.
''
ARCTOMYS. (Or. ,
a boar; ^f'f, a mouse.)
f~~' ^'Z*^
I;
IMF-"
HP p*^^^^
.
v; *,:;
-
dry grass and mosses, and the other fork serving as a store-
house for food, as a provision against the winter months, when
it retires to its hole, closes the entrance, and becomes
torpid
until the commencement of spring. When it first retires for
the winter, it is very fat, and is then killed and eaten in great
numbers. The skin is also of some service.
THE OX.
give milk, and are valuable for the dairy. The best dairy cow
is the
Alderney, a small, short-horned animal, furnishing ex-
ceedingly rich milk.
In some parts of England, oxen are used to draw waggons,
or to drag the plough.
They are not so strong as horses, and
their movements are much slower.
Formerly, the cruel sport of bull-baiting was much practised
NATURAL HISTORY. 123
ros.
THE ZEBU.
BUBAUTS. (Or. ,
n,
Buffalo.)
Buffelus, Me Buffalo
of water placed there expressly for his use. The tiger refused
for a long time to make his appearance, and it was not till
his den was filled with smoke and fire that he sprang out.
The buffalo charged his enemy in a moment, and by one
furious push capsized him right over. To our great dis-
appointment, the tiger pocketed this insult in the shabbiest
manner imaginable, and passing on, leaped furiously at the
ropes, with which his feet became entangled,
so that the
buffalo was enabled to punish his antagonist about the rump
most ingloriously. When at length the tiger got loose, he
slunk oft' to a distant part of the area, lay down, and pre-
tended to be dead. The boys, however, soon put him up
again, and tried to bring him to the scratch with squibs and
crackers and a couple of dozen dogs being introduced at the
;
same moment, they all set at him, but only one ventured to
take any liberty with the enraged animal. This bold dcg
actually caught the tiger by the tail, but a slight pat of the
mighty monster's paw crushed the yelping cur as flat as a
board. The buffalo, who really appeared anxious to have
a fair stand-up fight, now drove the dogs oft', and repeatedly
poked the tiger with his nose, and even turned him half over
several times with his horns.
"
We had then a fight between two buffaloes, which ran
their heads against each other with a crash that one could
only wonder was how both animals did not fall down dead
with their skulls fractured. But there appears to be a
w onderful degree of thickness or hardness in this part of the
r
animal."*
The has long been domesticated in India, and
Buffalo
from itsgreat strength is exceedingly useful. In its wild
state it is always found in marshy grounds, where the air is
* Hall's
Fragments, part iii. p. 98.
129 NATURAL HISTORY.
BUBALUS.
BISON.
THE YAK.
-^^^Jp^
ill,'
*-^-\ ;
l^ra* i
are very dangerous enemies. Both this animal and the Yak
are small, scarcely equalling in size the small Highland cattle,
but the thick hair which covers them makes them look larger
than they really are.
THE GNOO.
The GNOO, or WILDEBEEST, inhabits Southern Africa. At
first sight it is difficult to say whether the horse, buffalo, or
antelope predominates in its form. The horns cover the top
of the forehead, and then sweepingdownwards over the face,
turn boldly upwards with a sharp curve. The neck is fur-
nished with a mane like that of the horse, and the legs are
formed like those of the stag, It is a very swift animal, and
when provoked, very dangerous. When it attacks an oppo-
nent it drops on its knees, and then springs forward with such
force that, unless he is extremely wary and active, he cannot
avoid its shock. When first alarmed, its movements are very
grotesque.
NATURAL HISTORY. 133
11
When the hunter approaches the old bulls, they commence
whisking their long white tails in a most- eccentric manner ;
then springing suddenly into the air, they begin prancing and
capering, and pursue each other in circles at their utmost
speed. Suddenly they all pull up together, to overhaul the
intruder, when two of the bulls will often commence fighting
in the most violent manner, dropping on their knees at every
shock then quickly wheeling about, they kick up their heels,
;
whirl their tails with a fantastic flourish, and scour across the
plain enveloped in a cloud of dust."*
The size of the Gnoo is about that of a well-grown ass, that
is, about four feet in height. Its flesh is in great repute both
The best and fullest accounts of tho ELAND and the ORYX
are to be found in Harris and Cumming's Adventures in South
Africa. An extract from Gumming will be both interesting
and accurate. Of the Eland, he writes :
"
This magnificent animal is by far the largest of all the
antelope tribe, exceeding a large ox in size. It also attains
an extraordinary condition, being often burthened with a very
large amount of fat. Its flesh is most excellent, and is
justly
esteemed above all others. It has a peculiar sweetness, and
is tender and fit for use the moment the animal is killed.'
Like the gemsbok, the Eland is independent of water. It is
generally diffused throughout all the wooded districts of the
interior where I have hunted. Like other varieties of deer
and antelope, the old males may often be found consorting
together apart from the females, and a troop of these, when
NATURAL HISTORY. 13?
perishes by the shock, but the lion also perishes with it.
Their skeletons have been seen lying together bleached on the
plain.
"
The oryx, or gemsbok, to which I was now about to direct
my attention more particularly, is about the most beautiful
and remarkable of all the antelope tribe. It is the animal
which is supposed to have given rise to the fable of the
unicorn, from its long straight horns, when seen in
profile, so
exactly covering one another as to give it the appearance of
having but one. It possesses the erect mane, long sweeping
black tail, and general appearance of the horse, with the head
and hoofs of an antelope. It is robust in its form, squarely
and compactly built, and very noble in its bearing. Its
height is about that of an ass, and in colour it slightly
resembles that animal. The beautiful black bands which
eccentrically adorn its head, giving it the
appearance of wear-
ing a stall collar, together with the manner in which the rump
and thighs are painted, impart to it a character peculiar to it-
self. The adult male measures 3 feet 10 inches in height at the
shoulder."*'
THE SPRINGBOK.
Again an extract from Gumming must supply the place of
description. During his early travels in South Africa, the first
object that met his eyes on waking one morning, was a herd
of SPRINGBOKS, which he thus describes :f
"
On the 28th I had the satisfaction of beholding, for the
first time, what I had often heard the Boers allude to, viz. a
'
trek-bokken,' or grand migration of springboks. This was,
I think, the most
extraordinary and striking scene, as connected
with beasts of the chase, that I have ever beheld. For about
two hours before the day dawned I had been
lying awake in
my waggon, listening to the grunting of the bucks within
two hundred yards of me, imagining that some large herd of
springboks was feeding beside my camp ;
but on my rising
when it was clear, and looking about me, I beheld the ground
*
Cumming'-i Adventures. t ]bkl.
NATURAL HISTORY. 139
GAZELLA.
every side of me, thickly covered, not with herds, but with
one vast herd of springboks as far as the eye could strain the
;
landscape was alive with them, until they softened down into
a dim red mass of living creatures."
The Springbok is very fearful of man, and if it has to cross
a path over which a man has passed before, it does not walk
over, but takes a tremendous leap, ten or twelve feet high,
and about fifteen long, at the same time curving its back in a
most extraordinary manner. It is from this habit of leaping
that the Dutch Boers who inhabit the Cape have given it the
name of Springbok.
GAZELLA.
which curve with a bold sweep from the head almost to the
haunches. The horns are surrounded at regular intervals
with rings, and are immensely strong, serving, as some say,
tobreak the fall of the Ibex when it makes a leap from a
height.
When chased it is a dangerous animal, as after it has led
NATURAL HISTORY. 143
c.\rr.A.
ground.
THE GIRAFFE.
This beautiful and extraordinary animal is found only in
Africa. As the gnoo seems to ccmbinc the properties of the
antelope, horse, and buflalo, so the GIRAFFE appears to bear '
b.
Sub-family Camcfopardina.
found.
118 NATURAL HISTORY.
"In the case of invariably met with
the Giraffe, which
is
OF THE GIRAFFE.
THE CAMEL.
There is much confusion about the names of the Camels.
The BACTRIAN CAMEL is distinguished by bearing two humps
on its back, the ARABIAN CAMEL by bearing only one. The
Arabian camel is sometimes, but erroneously, called the Dro-
Sub-family c. Camelina.
MfcMfe
\&iP
lowing CD interesting
C3
and amusing account of the habits of the
t. *
Camel :
150 NATURAL HISTORY.
"
principal experience in camels has been during my
My
travels through the Arabian desert. I followed, after some
interval of time, the route of the Hajji the Mecca pil-
grimage.
"
The temper
of the Camel is in general not very amiable.
It is unwilling, jealous, and revengeful to the last degree. Of
this latter quality curious tales are told
:
one, which was fully
believed by the Arab that narrated it to me, was as follows.
A certain camel driver had bitterly insulted (i. e. thrashed in
some ignominious way,) the animal under his charge. The
camel showed a disposition to resent, but the driver knowing
from the expression of its eye what was passing within, kept
on the alert for several days. One night he had retired ibr
safety inside his tent, leaving his striped abbaya or cloak
spread over the wooden saddle of the camel outside the tent.
"
During the night he heard the camel approach the object,
and after satisfying himself by smell or otherwise that it was
his master's cloak, and believing that the said master was
asleep beneath it, he lay down and rolled backwards and for-
wards over the cloak, evidently much gratified by the cracking
and smashing of the saddle under his weight, and fully per-
suaded that the bones of his master were broken to pieces.
After a time he rose, contemplated with great contentment
the disordered mass, still covered by the cloak, and retired.
"
at the usual hour for loading, the master,
Next morning,
who had from the interior of his tent heard this agreeable
process going on, presented himself to the
camel. The dis-
appointed animal was in such a rage, said my informant, on
seeing his master safe before him, that he broke his heart, and
died on the spot.
"I had once to cross a very high range 'of recks, and we
had very great difficulty in getting our camels to face the
steeper part of the ascent, though any horse would
have made
very light of it. All the riders had to dismount, and the
laden animals made the bare rocky solitudes ring to the con-
tinual and most savage growls with which they vented their
displeasure. It is well on these occasions to keep out of reach
of their long necks, which they stretch out and bring their
teeth within dangerous proximity to the arm or side of any one
but their master.
NATURAL HISTORY. 151
"
"While being laden they testify their dislike to any packet
which looks unsatisfactory in point of size or weight as it is
carried past them, although when it is once on their backs
they continue to bear it with the patient expression of coun-
tenance which I fear passes for more than it is worth. All
camels are loaded kneeling, and can go from tw enty-four to
r
"
Sometimes a traveller places his whole family, wife and
children, in one pannier fastened to the saddle, puts himself in
another pannier fastened on the opposite side, and then falls in
with a caravan and accompanies it.
"
DROMEDARIES the finer and better bred Camels have
sparer frames and more endurance, and are principally led by
the Bedouins of the desert. They also object either to going
up or down a hill.
"
They are fond of kneeling at night just behind the ring of
Arabs who squat round the fire, and they stretch their heads
over their masters' shoulders to snuff up the heat and smoke,
which seems to content them vastly.
152 NATURAL HISTORY.
CAMELUS.
"
Between Cairo and Suez I saw more than one camel dead
or dying. They seem very tenacious of life, as they remain
unable to rise from a broken limb or other cause for very
many days. I more than once wished to go up and shoot
the poor creatures to put them out of their misery, but the
Arabs have superstitious notions on this point, and would not
sufferit. I did once find a camel that had been stabbed by
itsmaster, and once only. The poor beast had been exhausted,
and the long broad dagger struck into his heart. It must have
been a very short time before I reached the spot, as the blood
was almost fresh.
"
The Camels at Grand Cairo are remarkably large and
powerful, and my informant told me that they are very
proud, and will only eat their food from their master's hand
preferring to starve rather than receive it from any other
source."
The foot of the Camel is
admirably adapted for walking on
the loc.:e sand, being composed of large elastic pads, which
NATURAL HISTORY. 153
Sub-family d. Moscldna.
Sub-family e. Ccrvina.
CEIIVUS. (Lat. a Stay.)
C CUV US.
"
Elaplius (Gr. ,
a Stag), the Stag.
deer have horns, which they shed every year, and renew again.
The process of renewal is most interesting. A
skin, filled with
arteries, covers the projections on which the horns rest. This
skin, called the "velvet," is engaged in continually depositing
bone on the footstalks, which rapidly increase in size. r As the
budding horns increase, the velvet increases also, and the course
of the arteries is marked on the hom by long furrows, which
are never obliterated. "When the horn has reached its full
growth, it cannot be used, as the velvet is very tender, and
would bleed profusely if wounded. The velvet cannot be sud-
denly removed, as the blood that formed the arteries would rush
to the brain and destroy the animal. A ring of bone forms
CEKYU-.
Cimaderisis
(Lai^ belonging to Canada], the Wapitt.
England, and thrives well even in open parks. The horns are
slender, and are divided into three branches. Its usual colour
is a fawn
yellow, spotted regularly with white, and a black
stripe runs down the back.
NATURAL HISTORY. 130
RANGIFER.
a lighter hue, many deer being almost white. Its hoofs are
divided very high, so that when the animal places its foot on
the ground, the hoof spreads wide, and as it raises the foot, a
snapping noise is heard, caused by the parts of the hoof closing
together. When harnessed to a sledge, it can draw from 250
to 300 pounds' weight at about ten miles an hour.
same tent with him, eats from his hand, and sleeps among
his children, who tumble about on it without the least fear.
Few Arabs can be induced to part with a favourite horse.
The Rev. Y. Monro relates that an Arab, " the net value of
whose dress and accoutrements might be calculated at some-
thing under seventeen pence halfpenny," refused all offers
made to purchase a beautiful mare on which he rode, and
declared that he loved the animal better than his own life.
The plains of La Plata and Paraguay are tenanted by vast
herds of wild horses. These are captured by the lasso, bitted,
mounted, and broken, within an hour, by the daring and
skilful Gauchos.
The ponderous and powerful dray-horse is of the Flanders
breed. These huge animals, as they slowly pace along the
streets, men who seern to be a Flanders race also,
conducted by
never the attention of admiring foreigners.
fail to attract
Wales and the Shetland Isles produce a breed forming a
great contrast to the Flanders horse. The Sheltie, as it is
called, is very small, its height sometimes being only thirty-
four inches but it is very strong and sure-footed, carrying its
;
THE ASS.
The humble and hardy Ass is scarcely less serviceable to
man than the more imposing horse. In this country, where
it meets with harsh treatment, is
scantily fed, and only used
and obstinate
for laborious tasks, it is dull ;
but in the East,
where it is employed by the rich nobles and is properly treated,
it is an
elegant and spirited animal, with good action and
smooth coat. White asses are always used in the East for the
NATURAL HISTORY.
Asixus. (Lat, an Ass.)
ASIXUS.
ASIXUS.
Family III. .
Elephantiche. (Gr. 'E/U'daf, an Elephant. Elephant kind.)
Sub-family a. Elephantina.
ELEI'HAS.
by suction. If the
Elephant wishes to drink, after drawing the
it inserts the end of the proboscis into its
trunk
liquid into its
imprudent sufferer was long confined to his bed from the effects
of his absurdity."
The tusks and teeth of the elephant furnish exceedingly fine
ivory, which is used for various purposes,
such as knife handles,
"
ELEI'IIAS.
"
The AFRICAN ELEPHANT is widely diffused through the vast
forests, and is met with in herds of various numbers. The
male is very much larger than the female consequently, much
;
averages from six to eight feet, and they weigh from sixty to a
hundred pounds each.
"
The females, unlike Asiatic elephants in this respect, are
likewise provided with tusks. The price which the largest
ivory fetches in the English market is from 281. to 321. per
172 NATURAL HISTORY.
hundred-and-twelve pounds. Old bull elephants are found
singly or in pairs, or consorting together in small herds, vary-
ing from six to twenty individuals. The younger bulls remain
for many years in the company of their mothers, and these
are met together in large herds of from twenty to a hundred
individuals. The food of the Elephant consists of the branches,
leaves, and roots of trees, and
also of a variety of bulbs, of
the situation of which he advised by his exquisite sense of
is
It is surprising how
they go a long way before they halt.
soon these sagacious animals are aware of the presence of a
hunter in their domains. When one troop has been attacked,
all the other elephants frequenting the district are aware of the
fact within two or three days, when they all forsake it, and
and cloudy weather they drink only once every third or fourth
day. About sundown the elephant leaves his distant midday
haunt, and commences his march towards the fountain, which
is
probably from twelve to twenty miles distant. This he
generally reaches between the hours of nine and midnight;
when, having slaked his thirst and cooled his body by spout-
ing large volumes of water over his back with his trunk, he
resumes the to his forest solitudes.
path Having reached a
secluded spot, I have remarked that full-grown bulls lie down
NATURAL HISTORY. 173
Sub-family b.
Tapirina.
TAPIRUS.
Sub-family c. Sulna.
severely injure the rider with one sweep of its enormous tusks.
SU8.
Sub-family d. Rhinocerina.
RHINOCEROS.
they leave them in general until they have broken them into
pieces. All the four varieties delight to roll and wallow in
mud, with which their rugged hides are generally encrusted.
Both varieties of the black rhinoceros are much smaller and
more active than the white, and are so swift that a horse
with a rider on its back can rarely overtake them. The two
varieties of the white rhinoceros are so similar in habits, that
the description of one will serve for both, the principal difler-
ence consisting in the length and set of the anterior horn that ;
e.
Bub-family Hippopotamina.
.
(Or. ITTTTO?. a Horse; irorauoc. a River.)
They can remain about five or six minutes under water, and
when they emerge they make a loud and very peculiar snorting
noise, which can be heard at a great distance.
The hide is very thick and strong, and is chiefly used for
whips. The well-known " cow-hides" are made of this mate-
rial. Between the skin and flesh is a layer of fat, which is
salted and eaten by the Dutch colonists of Southern Africa.
"When salted it is called Zee-koe speck, or Sea-cow's bacon-
The flesh is also in some request,
182 NATl'RAL HISTORY.
body rose to the surface. Vulnerable only behind the ear, how-
ever, or the eye, which is placed in a prominence, so as to
resemble the garret window of a Dutch house, they require
the perfection of rifle practice, and after a few shots become
exceedingly shy, exhibiting the snout only, and as instantly
withdrawing it. The flesh is delicious, resembling pork in
flavour, and abounding in fat, which in the colony is de-
servedly esteemed the greatest of delicacies. The hide is up-
wards of an inch and a half in thickness, and being scarcely
flexible, may be dragged from the ribs in strips like the planks
from a ship's side."
Gumming relates that the track of the Hippopotamus may
be distinguished from that of any other animal by a line of
unbroken herbage which is left between the marks of the feet
of each side, as the width of the space between the right and
left legs causes the animal to
place its feet so considerably
apart, as to make a distinct double track.
This is supposed by many to be the animal called Behemoth
in Scripture.
NATURAL HISTORY. 183
BRADYPUS.
H -
** \~
? vW>
ity, particularly in
a gale of wind, when it passes from branch
to branch and from tree to tree with an activity which its move-
ments on the ground by no means portend.
MANIS.
Tetradactyla (Gr. ,
four-fingered), the Phatagin, or Long-
tailed Manis.
up, wrap their tails round them, and raise the whole array of
sharp-edged scales with which their body covered, and bid
is
MAMS.
THE ARMADILLO.
The ARMADILLOS live exclusively in the warmer parts of
America. They eat carrion, insects, and sometimes fallen
fruit. The armour that covers them, instead of resembling
scale armour like that of the Manis, forcibly reminds the
observer of the modified plate armour worn in the time of
Charles I. They burrow with great rapidity, and can only
186 NATURAL HISTORY.
b.
Sub-family Dasypina.
DASYPUS. (Gr. Aacrt>c, haiiy ; -trove, a foot.)
half. Its tail was about fourteen or sixteen inches long, and
its root nearly as thick as a man's thigh, tapering very ab-
ruptly. The middle one of the five toes of the fore foot was
seven and a half inches in length. In size it greatly surpasses
the largest Giant Armadillo known (Dasypus giganteus,
Desm.), though Mr. Schomburgh does not mean to assert it is
a different species from the giganteus yet its enormous size
;
c.
Sub-family Myrmecophagind.
MYRMECOPHAGA. (Gr. ^vpjut]^, an Ant; to eat.)
d.
Sub-family Ornithorhynchina.
GYPAETUS.
The bones of adult birds are not filled with marrow like
the bones of mammalia, but are hollow and filled with air,
and are therefore rendered very light, a bone of a goose being
barely half the weight of
a rabbit's bone of the same size, after
the marrow has been In this formation, strength
extracted.
as well as lightness is a tubular rod is well
consulted, as
known to be very much stronger than the same quantity of
matter formed into a solid bar. The bones forming the wing
are worthy of notice for the beautiful manner in which they
are jointed together, and arranged so as to give great strength
together with lightness. In the following figure, the limbs of
a man and of a bird are compared, the corresponding divisions
of each being marked by similar letters.
LEG.
ing the feathers of the different parts, together with their names :
STERNUM.
mergeyer.
Although called the "Bearded" Vulture, it is not strictly a
vulture, as its head and neck are feathered, and it rejects putrid
flesh, unless hard pressed by hunger.
It destroys hares, and young or sickly sheep and goats, nor,
when rendered fierce by hunger, does it fear attack the
to
adult chamois, or even man. It is said to destroy the larger
animals by watching until they are near the brink of a preci-
pice, and then suddenly driving them
over the rocks by an un-
expected swoop. In this manner the strong and swift chamois
falls a victim to the craft of its winged foe, and instances are
not wanting where the chamois hunter himself has been struck
from a narrow ridge into the valley beneath by a blow frcni
this ferocious bird.
It is exceedingly bold, and shows but little fear of man. "While
Bruce was preparing his dinner on the summit of a mountain,
one of these birds, after scalding
'
O its feet in several unavailingO
attempts to extract some meat out of the boiling w ater, actually
T
THE CONDOR.
The Sarcorhamphidse are distinguished by a fleshy tuft
growing on their beaks, somewhat resembling the wattles of a
turkey. The genus Sarcorhamphos includes the Condor, the
King Vulture, and the California!! Vulture. These birds are
distinguished by the wattles on their beaks, their naked necks,
and the size of the nostrils. The third primary feather is the
longest.
1'Jl NATURAL HISTORY.
Family II.
Sarcorhamphidse. (Gr. 2/^, flesh ; , beak.)
S AUCOU1IAMPIIOS.
pears that this bird does not build any nest, but lays its two
white eggs on the bare rock after the manner of many sea
birds. It is a very large bird, but
by no means the gigantic
creature some former naturalists relate, with wings twenty
feet in length, and powerful enough to carry off a horse. The
real expanse of wing is about nine or ten ieet, and the length
of the bird about four feet. It is, however, exceedingly strong
and very tenacious of life. Two Condors will attack and kill
the llama, or even the for their repeated buffeting
puma ; by
and pecking they weary it so completely that it
yields to their
perseverance.
NATURAL HISTORY. 195
SAROOKIIAMPHOS.
Papa, Me Vultur
"We now arrive at the true VULTURES. These birds are the
representatives of the carrion-devouring animals, such as the
hyenas, wild dogs, &c. They however do not, as the hyenas
and wild dogs, attack living animals. The neck of the Vulture
is almost naked, very slightly sprinkled with down, and from
the formation of the lower part of the neck, the bird is enabled
to draw its head almost under the feathers of its shoulders, so
that a hasty observer would conclude that the creature had no
neck at all.
The marvellous quickness with which the vultures discover
a dead animal has caused many discussions among naturalists
as to the sense employed ; some, as Audubon, declaring entirely
19G NATURAL HISTORY.
GYPS.
EAGLES.
The Falconidro hold the same place among birds as the
Felidai among terrestrial
quadrupeds. The beak of this fam-
ily is strong and curved, and
the feet furnished with sharp
talons, just as the Felicia) are armed with long sharp teeth
and powerful claws. The Falconidse differ from the Vulturidaj
in having feathered necks, and in killing their prey and de-
Sub-family a. .
Aquilincc.
he took off his bonnet and threw it at the eagle, which imme-
diately flew after it to the foot of the rock. As she was re-
turning to the attack, finding an opportunity of taking a steady
aim, he shot her."
The eye of this bird, and of most of the birds of prey, is pro-
vided with an arrangement for enabling it to see an object near
or at a great distance. The old tale of the eagle delighting to
gaze at the sun is equally poetical and false, the true fact being
that the eye is shaded from the sun by the projecting eyebrow.
As to the nictitating membrane which some assert to be given
to the Eagle in order to enable it to gaze at the sun, all birds
have it, and the owl, who is blinded by ordinary daylight, pos-
sesses it in perfection.
200 NATURAL HISTORY.
The feet of the genus Pandion are naked, armed with very
long curved talons, the outermost of which can be drawn to-
gether, so as to hold their slippery prey. The wings are ample,
and the second and third primary feathers the longest.
The OSPREY, or FISHING HAWK, is spread over the whole
of Europe, part of Asia, and some portions of North America.
As its name imports, its food consists entirely of fish, which
it
by dashing into the water, and seizing them with
obtains
its curved talons. The Osprey, although it takes the fish, is
not the only bird that has a predilection for that diet, as the
bald-headed eagle frequently waits until the osprey has seized
the prey, and then deprives him of it. Want of room prevents
the insertion of the entire spirited passage from Wilson's Orni-
thology, describing the chase and capture. He relates that
the eagle, after watching the osprey as it dashes into the
water after its finny prey, starts off in pursuit as it emerges,
"
bearing a fish in its talons. Each exerts his utmost to
mount above the other, displaying, in these rencontres, the
NATURAL HISTORY. 201
IIALIAETUS.
THE .BUZZARD.
The family of the BUZZARDS are distinguished by their short
beaks, large rounded wings, and squared tails. They all prey
oh small animals, reptiles, and various insects.
The Common Buzzard occurs throughout most of Europe
and part of Asia, being frequently found in England. When
searching for food, it rests upon some high branch, keeping a
keen watch on the ground, and waiting patiently until some
small animal, such as a rat, or young rabbit, makes its appear-
ance, when it
instantly sweeps down from its elevation, seizes
its
prey without settling on the ground, and returns, if not dis-
turbed, to the same spot, very much in the same manner that
the fly-catcher may be observed to act.
NATURAL HISTORY. 203
BUTEO.
3v% A
bees and grubs were found, but no lioney or wax. It does not.
trees, and its eggs are two or three in number, grey, spotted
with red at one end, and surrounded with a red band. Its
length is about two feet, and the expanse of its wings fifty-two
inches. The third primary feather is the longest.
FALCONS.
In the genus Falco, the second primary feather is the long-
est, the first and third being of equal length. The G-YRFAL-
CON may be considered the type of the British Falconidae. It
is, however, extremely rare in England, those intended for
Sub-family e. falconiitce.
as the phrase was, upon the Heron. When the Falcon had
closed with its prey, they both came to the ground together,
IIYPOTRIORCIIIS.
THE GOSHAWK.
The GOSHAWK is found plentifully in most of the wooded
dashes through the air. Should the terrified quarry hide it-
self, the Goshawk takes up its station on some elevated spot,
and there patiently waits until the game takes wing. Its
principal food consists of hares, squirrels, pheasants, and other
212 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family f. Accipitrina.
ASTUR. (Proper name.)
t 'lit!
s-
-r=SS\^ >- -*w vA!\VAi\ .\',A\\\
m
///./ ;/
longest.
o
ACCIPITER. (Lat.)
inches. The fourth and fifth primary feathers are the longest.
It builds upon lofty trees, laying five eggs, of a whitish colour
blotched with variable reddish brown markings, usually collect-
ed towards the large end.
Sub-family g. Circina.
SERPEN TARIUS.
T
(Lat. of a Serpent.)
the beak splits the snake's head asunder, and the vanquished
enemy is speedily swallowed. In the crop of a Secretary bird
that was dissected by Le Vaillant were found eleven large liz-
ards, three serpents, each a yard in length, eleven small tor-
toises, and a great quantity of locusts and other insects. Besides
these, the bird had just killed another serpent, which it would
in all probability have transferred to the same receptacle had
it not boen killed. The Secretary is
easily tamed, and is then
exceedingly useful. It builds on high trees, laying three large
eggs, almost white. Its length is about three feet.
NATURAL HISTORY. 215
CIRCUS. (Lat,)
the longest.
W I, S.
PURXIA.
flight that they seem borne along by the wind like a tuft of
thistle-down.
The HAWK, or CANADA OWL, inhabits the arctic portions of
Asia and America. Its head is not so round, nor is its face so
broad, as. those of the other owls, from which it is also distin-
guished by its habit of hunting by day. In face it bears some
resemblance to the harriers. It builds in trees, and lays two
eggs white, as are those of all owls. The eggs of owls are
easily distinguished from other white eggs by a peculiar rough-
ness of surface, which cannot be mistaken. The length of the
Hawk Owl is from fifteen to eighteen inches.
NATURAL HISTORY. 217
K
218 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family
V
b. Bubonina.
I
am* (i
d.
Sub-family Strigince.
frequent it, and are encouraged all around it. The barn owl
merely resorts to it for repose and concealment. If it were
CAPRIMULGUS.
which is said closely to imitate the words that have been as-
signed to them as their names. Of course the English language
must feel itself highly honoured that an American bird should
"
prefer the language of the Britisher" to that of the Delaware
or the Sioux. Both the birds fly by night, or rather in the
dusk of the evening, and like the owl are much distressed by
being forced to face a brilliant light. The Chuck-Will's- Widow
is
partially migratory, and dwells in the more southern parts of
America during the winter. Audubon relates that this bird
applies its enormous mouth to rather an unexpected use, viz.,
that of removing its eggs, if it finds that they have been dis-
turbed. Of this curious circumstance he was an eye-witness.
He saw the bird that first discovered that an intruder had
touched the eggs wait for its mate, and then saw each of them
take an egg in its mouth and convey it off.
M A II T X
I
Sub-family a. .
Cypselincc.
their tails are long and forked all which properties we know
;
These are intended for the young, and the supply is constantly
renewed. It lays from two to ibur long white eggs, on a nest
Sub-family b. Hirundiniaaj.
.
(Lat.)
-" '
Sub-family a Corac'dnce.
CORACIAS. (Gr. KopaKiac, like a Raven.)
TROGOtf.
The magnificent family of the TROGONS stands preeminent
in beauty and brilliancy of plumage, the usual tint being a
metallic golden green, boldly contrasted with scarlet, black,
and brown. The toes are placed two behind and two before,
like those of the
woodpeckers.
The Resplendent Trogon is the most gorgeous of all this
NATURAL HISTORY. 223
bright crimson ;
the middle feathers of the tail black, and the
outer feathers white. This splendid bird is an inhabitant of
Mexico, and was used by the Mexican nobles as an ornament
to their head dress. From the feathers of these and other
Trogons the mosaic pictures of the Mexicans were made. One
of these, most delicately and beautifully executed, containing
many figures, is now in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford. It
is there said to be made of
humming-birds' feathers. The sub-
"
ject is Christ fainting under the cross." The whole picture
is about the size of the
palm of the hand, and the figures are
barely half an inch in height, yet the very expression of the
features is preserved.
230 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family a. . Alcedinince.
ALCKDO.
Family VI. . .
Meropidie.
a.
Sub-family .
Meropince.
MKROPS. (Gr. Mtpoi/>.)
The HOOPOE, one of the most elegant birds that visit this
country, is, unfortunately, a very rare guest, and seldom, if ever,
breeds here. Its beautiful crest can be raised or depressed at
Humming-bird.
always balancing itself over them by its wings. Let the ob-
server move but his hand, and it is gone has vanished as
mysteriously as it earns.
In the same way, the Humming-bird hovers over flowers,
not only to extract the honey and clew, but to search for the
little insects that are always to be found in such places.
"
It seems to ba an erroneous
opinion that the Humming-
bird lives entirely on honey-dew. Almost every flower of
the tropical climates contains insects of one kind or other ;
"
little bird is extremely susceptible of cold, and if
This
long deprived of the animating influence of the sunbeams,
droops, and soon dies. A
very beautiful male was brought
me this season, which I put into a wire cage, and placed in a
retired shaded part of the room. After fluttering about for
some time, the weather being uncommonly cool, it clung by
the wires, and hung in a seemingly torpid state for a whole
forenoon. No motion whatever of the lungs could be per-
ceived on the closest inspection though at other times this
;
and faster, opened its eyes, and began to look about with as
much seeming vivacity as ever. After it had completely re-
covered I restored it to liberty and it flew off to the withered
;
does not injure even the delicate scales of the butterfly's wing.
They are veiy quarrelsome little creatures, and frequently
fightwith expanded crests and ruffled feathers until they fall
exhausted to the ground.
The nests are very neat and beautiful, and, as may be
imagined from the diminutive size of the little architect, exceed-
ingly small. They are composed of down, cotton, &c., and are
CF.P.Tni.X.
^E*S^ V\N
Sub-family b. . Sttiince.
SITTA. (Gr.
Sub-family c. Menurincc.
V,
the longest.
242 NATURAL HISTORY.
LUSCINIA.
"
But theNightingale, another of my airy creatures,
breathes such sweet, loud music out of her instrumental
throat, that it might make mankind to think that miracles
are not ceased. He that at midnight when the very labourer
sleeps securely, should hear, as I have very often, the clear
airs, the sweet descents, the natural rising and falling, the
NATURAL PIISTORY. C43
for the saints in Heaven, when thou affordest bad men such
music on earth /'
It must be borne in mind, that not
only in this bird, but in
other singing birds, the male is the vocalist, so that Milton's
address to the " sweet songstress" is unfortunately not quite
so correct as poetical a misfortune of frequent occurrence.
;
^^\ *A
"
m. \\
-
:
^
ill
hardly larger than a wren, but the length of its tail increases
its apparent size. Furze-bushes form its usual residence.
There it may be seen hovering over the tops of the bushes,
uttering its curious quavering song, at the same time erecting
the feathers of its head, and puffing up its throat. It lays its
made of dried grass, moss, and hairs. The eggs are five in
NATURAL HISTORY. 245
SYLVIA.
SYLVIA.
REGULUS. (Lat.)
m *$
>'>"
The nest is
placed usually in a hole in a wall, or in a hollow
*
In 1847, I found a Redstart's nest built in a hole of a wall, forming one side of a
narrow passage in Merton College, Oxford. The eggs were nearly hatched, and the
birds did not seem to be disturbed by the constant passing of servants with their
paraphernalia of brooms, pails, &c.
248 NATURAL HISTORY.
tree. The eggs are five in number, of a greenish blue colour,
closely resembling those of the Hedge Accentor. The length of
the bird is rather more than five inches. The fourth primary
feather is the longest.
ERYTUACUS.* (Gr.
Sub-family c. Accentorincc.
ACCENTOR. (Lat. a Singer.)
r.
*
Abou^ the year 1843, a Robin used to frequent our house. He was so tame as to
answer to his name " Bob," and continued his attachment even through the summer.
When the rabbits were fed, Bob always came to assist, and usually contrived to
perch on the edge of the pan from which the rabbit was eating. Both parties seem-
ed perfectly satisfied, and Bunny and Bob always continued very good friends.
250 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family d. Parince.
PARUS.
The birds of the family of the TITS are remarkable for their
active habits among the branches of trees. There are few who
have not seen these beautiful and interesting little birds twist-
ing round the branches, perfectly unconcerned at the presence
of the spectator, sometimes hanging, head downwards, some-
times chasing an unlucky beetle along the bark, and invariably
catching it, in spite of its swift limbs and active wings some-
;
TAEU5.
!,,***'>>* >Sv<^
^
Coeruleus (Lat. blue), tJte Blue Titmouse.
PAUL'S.
entirely closed, except one small hole at the side, just large
enough to admit the bird. The exterior of the ne?t is usually
covered with lichens, and it is lined with a thick layer of soft
feathers. In this warm and elegant habitation from ten to
fourteen eggs are laid. They are small and very delicately
spotted. The entire length of the bird is about five inches
and a half.
Sub-family e. Motacillince.
MOTACILLA.
Cinclus (Gr. ),
the Dipper.
Sub-family b. Turdince.
TURDUS.
fine weather but that nature has taught it to pour forth its
;
Europe, and only visits this country during the cold winter
months. From its excellence as an adjunct to the table, it is
perseveringly sought after, but is so shy, that unless the bird
is
very busy satisfying its hunger, there is some difficulty in
approaching within gun-range.
It builds in fir or pine-trees, and lays several bluish-green
eggs, spotted with brown. Its length is about ten inches.
TURD US.
pose, it
invariably returns to it with its prey, so that heaps of
broken snail-shells may often be found where the thrushes have
been at work.
The eggs of the Thrush are five in number, of a bluish-
green colour, spotted with a deep reddish -brown. Sometimes
the spots are altogether absent.
wings and tail glistening with white, and the buoyant gaiety
of his action arresting the eye, as his song does most irre-
sistibly the ear,
he sweeps round with enthusiastic ecstasy,
and mounts and descends as his song swells or dies away.
He often deceives the sportsman, and sends him in search of
birds that are not perhaps within miles of him, but whose
notes he exactly imitates even birds themselves are frequently
:
Sub-family c. Oriolince.
OKIOLUS.
The genus Oriolus has the beak notched and rather bent at
the tip. The GOLDEN ORIOLE is only an occasional visitor to
this country, and has never as yet been seen in Scotland. It
is a very shy bird, frequenting the skirts of woods, especially
copses that border on larger woods. In the fruit season it
leaves the woods for the orchards, and makes no small havoc
among the fruit, particularly the figs, grapes, and cherries.
The nest is made of wood and fine hayis generally ;
it
Family III. . .
Muscicapidax (Gr. Musca, a Fly ; capio, I take. Fly
catcher kind.)
Sub-family a. Muscicapincc.
MUSCICAPA.
Family IV. . . .
Ampelidse.
Sub-family a. . .
Ampelincc.
AMPELIS. (Gr. 'A/zTre/Uf.)
LANIUS.
THE JAY.
'
:-fcv-
-v 1 .
'
',;-,-
i. !..'* '. -''-' ,,i
'
' ''',
; ../ .-
; '
'
" '
-'
'.- ! .;- '.'' ,v
ing, yet it can imitate the sweet notes of singing birds, such as
the Greenfinch, with wonderful fidelity. It has also frequently
been taught to articulate words.
The name of Glandarius has been given to the Jay, because
it feeds on vegetable
productions, such as acorns, &c., more
than the true Crows. It is also partial to fruits, especially ripe
cherries, and is consequently persecuted by the gardener. It is
also said to devour eggs and young birds.
Its nest is built about twenty feet from the ground, the upper
part of a thick bush being preferred. The eggs are five or six
in number, of a yellowish white, thickly speckled with brown.
The length of the bird is nearly fourteen inches.
!70 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family b. Corvimc.
NCCIFBAGA. (Lat. JVux, a imt; frango, \ break.)
trees, using its tail for a support, and pecks away the bark in
order to reach the insects beneath, just as the w oodpeckers do.
r
eggs are laid at the bottom of a hole in some tree. They are of
a greyish yellow colour, diversified with a few dark grey spots.
NATURAL HISTORY 271
look out for a good, strong, forked branch, and begin by laying
two sticks crosswise.' That's just what I did,' said the rook.
'
Next, you must raise the sides a little, and then put in some
'
hay, which you must work well into the sticks.' The very '
'
thing I have been doing,' said the crow. Now, for fear the
eggs should be broken or thrown out, you must raise the
sides about as high as your head when you sit in the bottom
of l-i3 noil;, and put in some soft wool.'
'
thrush,
'
I did as far as that before I came here.' Oh then,
'
!
CORVUS.
v /' ;
x
i> '
^SK^ ^
^^Pa
''
>
: -
'
-^
'/J^1
con v us.
ing round the hen, she resolutely defended them, and drove the
crow into an apple-tree, whither she pursued him with such
spirit and intrepidity, that he was glad to make a speedy re-
treat and abandon his design."*
and a few clean picked bones are the only memorials of the
banquet.
The nests of this bird are placed on the summit of some tall
tree, and contain about five eggs, closely resembling those of the
rook. The length of the bird is
eighteen inches.
c.
Sub-family Pyrrhocoracince.
This most gorgeous and elegant bird was once the subject
of much discussion between naturalists. The natives of New
Guinea were accustomed to dry them, having first cut off their
legs, and then to offer them for sale. In this footless state they
reached Europe, where it was immediately stated that the bird
lived always in the air, buoyed
up by the lightness of its feathery
covering ;
that the shoulders were used as its nest ;
that the
only rest it took was by suspending itself from a branch by the
filamentary feathers of the tail that its food was the morning
;
than amusinsr.
NATURAL HISTORY. 281
This bird appears about the size of a jay. Its body, breast,
and lower parts are of a deep rich brown the front set close
;
Sub-family d. Icterincc.
Sub-family (j.
Sturnincc.
STURNUS.
Family IV. .
Fringillidre. (Lat. Fringilla, a Finch. Finch kind.)
Sub-family d. Fringillincc.
TRIXGILLA.
family. None of the species are large, and most of them are
excellent songsters. Their beaks are all conical, and fitted
for the destruction of corn, peas, &c.
The CHAFFINCH or PIEFINCII, as it is often called, is so
well known as to need no description. It ischiefly re-
markable for the beautiful nest which it constructs. The
forks of a thorn or wild crab-tree are favourable places for the
nest, which is composed of mosses, hair, wool and feathers,
covered on the exterior with lichens and mosses, so exactly
resembling the bough on which the nest is placed, that the
eye is often deceived by its appearance. In the nest four or
five very pretty eggs are laid these are of a reddish-brown
:
FRIXGILLA.
by the Goldfinch.
In captivity it is very tame, and can be trained to per-
form a multitude of tricks, the most common of which are,
drawing its own food and water with a chain and bucket,
or firing a gun when commanded. The nest is very beau-
tiful, being mostly made *of wool and down from various
FRI.\GILLA.
FRINGILLA.
FRIN-G1LLA.
Chloris (Gr. ,
green), the Greenfinch,
lands, and feeds on insects or seeds. The notes of this bird are
not peculiarly melodious, nor has it many qualifications to
entitle it to notice.
NATURAL HISTORY. 289
,:\v
Sub-family c. JEmbcrizina.
EMBEUIZA.
THE SKYLARK.
The LARKS are known by their very long hind toe. The
Skylark, which pours forth its animated song while suspendeC
high in the air, is an inhabitant of most parts of Europe, Asia
and North Africa, but is not found in America. A very into
NATURAL HISTORY. 291
Sub-family/. . . Alaudince.
PYRKII VLA. ( G r.
"
Having shot down a number, some of which were only
wounded, the whole flock swept repeatedly round their
prostrate companions, and again settled on a low tree, within
twenty yards of the spot where I stood. At each successive
discharge, though showers of them fell, yet the affection
of the survivors seemed rather to increase, for after a few
round the place they again alighted near me, looking
circuits
down on their slaughtered companions with such manifest
PAKEORNIS. (Gr. ,
old ; opvi?, a bird.)
CACATUA.
ricus.
Hilt
jure trees. Their only object in pecking away the wood and
bark, is to get at the insects which they know are hidden
within. Now insects seldom or never bore into healthy wood,
but a decayed branch or stump is always full of them, as is
well known to the entomologist. So the winged entomologist,
when he perceives a decayed branch, or finds an unsound'spot in
the trunk, immediately sets to work industriously, and is re-
warded by finding plenty of insects, which he draws out and
demolishes, with more benefit to himself and possibly more
good to others than many human entomologists can boast.
Although the Woodpecker does not scoop away sound trees,
yet it is because it has no motive for doing so not that the
power is wanting. Wilson had an Ivory-billed Woodpecker in
his possession, which pecked away lath and plaster in its
efforts to escape, and utterly ruined a mahogany table to which
it was fastened.
The GREAT SPOTTED WOODPECKER is an inhabitant of Eng-
land, but is seldom seen. Large woods are its favourite haunts.
Like all its tribe, it feeds on the insects which it procures from
decayed trees, and also on berries and fruits. Its eggs are laid
in a deep hole excavated in a tree. For this purpose the
Woodpecker usually chooses a place where a branch has broken
off, or more commonly the part of the trunk where a certain
fungus has grown, causing the tree to decay in that spot, al-
though apparently healthy.
FICUS.
THE WRYNECK.
The WRYNECK is tolerably common in the southern counties
of England, but is scarcely ever seen in the north and west.
It principally feeds on ants, which it picks up with great
* I have more than once seen the Green Woodpecker busily employed among the
trees of the Christ Church Walks, Oxford, and very frequently in Bagley Wood. I
have never seen it on the ground, and but once on the smaller branches of the trees.
NATURAL HISTORY. 305
Sub-family g. Yuncince.
YUNX. (Gr.
THE CUCKOO.
The CUCKOO, spring's harbinger, has, at all ages, obtained
for itself a name at once
pleasing and disreputable pleasing,
;
because its well-known notes are a sign that the cold winter
is
gone and disreputable, because it usurps the nests of other
;
30G NATURAL HISTORY.
CUCULUS.
COLUMBA.
/^-tffNi^s^
7s /yft^
COLUMCA.
Ss
"
Not far from Shelby ville, in the
state of Kentucky, about
five years ago, there was one
of these breeding places, which
stretched through the woods in nearly a north and south direc-
tion, was several miles in breadth, and was said to be upwards
offorty miles in extent / In this tract almost every tree was
furnished with nests, wherever the branches could accommodate
them. The pigeons made their first appearance there about
the 10th of April, and left it altogether, with their young, before
the 25th of May.
"
As soon as the young were fully grown, and before they
left the nests, numerous
parties of the inhabitants, from all
parts oi' the adjacent country, came with waggons, axes, beds,
NATURAL HISTORY. 311
"-
v w/ry=&
?;JZ$
:
m
'i'
/s
\t
DOMESTIC PIGEONS.
with air, until the head is almost hidden behind it. This
inflation sometimes causes the bird to lose its balance, and
NATURAL HISTORY. 313
THE PEACOCK.
THIS magnificent bird is not a native of this country, but
has been domesticated in England for many years. Some
that it was at first brought from India by Alexander,
suppose
and by him introduced into Europe. The magnificent plumes
that adorn the Peacock are not the tail, as many suppose, but
the tail-coverts. The tail feathers themselves are short and
rigid, and serve to keep the train expanded,
as may be seen
when the bird walks about in all the majesty of his expanded
plumage.
Although pea-fowl seek their food on the ground, they
invariably roost on some elevated situation, such as a high
branch or the roof of a barn or haystack. "When the bird is
perched on the roof, its train lies along the thatch, and is quite
invisible in the dusk.
We have almost dismissed pea-fowl from our entertainments
in these days, but in the times of chivalry, a roasted peacock,
still clothed in its plumage, and with its train displayed,
formed one of the chief ornaments of the regal board. The
nest of this bird is made of sticks and leaves rudely thrown
fllll m
Cristatus (Lat. crested), the Peacock.
Sub-family b. Phasianincc.
ARGUS. (Gr. proper name.)
*- ^ s/ J
-i /
\ >
^s^
tfek.s x<
y
vfu
<j v,vv ,: i-sp^^
^j^.*-\-j, :-.j . ,,:?,< ..'.n< , -xvv ^w^aroftk.
"Mw;
C5^l
hardy bird, and bears the cold months very well. Although it
can be tamed and will come to be fed with the poultry, yet an
innate timidity prevents it from being thoroughly domesticated.
Young pheasants that have been hatched under a hen, scamper
off in terror if an unexpected intruder makes his appearance
Sub-family c. Gallincr.
GAI.U*>. (Lat. a Cock.')
.-
:''''
THE TURKEY.
The TURKEY is an inhabitant of America, and appears to
have been imported into Europe about the year 1600. Its
habits in a state of domestication need no description, but
when wild in its native woods are rather interesting. It
is
partly migratory in its habits, moving from the parts
about Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, towards the Ohio and
Mississippi. The march is usually performed on foot in large
flocks, the birds seldom using their wings except when at-
absurd to see the poor creature pecking up a stray crumb or two outside the general
circle, and flying in terror before a little game hen, if it ventured to approach too
close. The principal advantage of this bird seems to be that the chickens, from their
superior size, are ready for the market at an earlier age than those of the ordinary
fowl.
NATURAL HISTORY. 31U
Sub-family d. Mdcagrince.
MELEAGRIS. (Gr. Me/.eaypic, a Guinea-fowl.)
any injury, at the very instant that the turkey suffers him-
self to fall headlong towards the earth, when he is secure from
his dreaded enemy."
NUMIDA. (Lat.)
Sub-family a. . Perdicince.
COTURNIX. (Lat.)
The QUAIL
is a
tolerably common little bird, visiting England
in the summer. Countless flocks of them are spread over
the whole of Southern Europe, and multitudes are taken and
sent to the London markets thirty-six thousand having been
;
Sub-family b. Tctraonince.
TETRAO.
1 m&3 ?
v.
1
\
st
The RED GROUSE has never been found wild on the Conti-
nent, but seems to confine itself exclusively to the heaths of
Scotland, Wales and Ireland. In these places it is very
"
numerous, associating in flocks or packs," and together
with the black grouse is
eagerly pursued by sportsmen, who
are frequently baffled by the shy and wary habits of the birds.
The nest of the Red Grouse is formed of heath and grass
carelessly heaped together on the ground under the shelter
of some low shrub. The young are fully fledged by August.
THE PTARMIGAN.
The legs and feet of the PTARMIGANS are thickly covered
with hair-like feathers reaching as far as the claws. Their
plumage bears a singular analogy to the fur of the ermine
and some other quadrupeds, as it changes in winter from a
rich almost tortoiseshell pure white.
colour The
to a
common Ptarmigan inhabits the northern parts of Europe
and America, and is also found in the north of Scotland,
principally among the mountaii^. The colour of the bird
is so similar to that of the mossy and lichen-covered rocks
NATURAL HISTORY
LAGrUJ
TALE3ALLUS.
^
.'-
-
I
heap ;
and as they are delicious eating they are eagerly sought
after."
When the Brush Turkey is disturbed, it either runs through
the tangled underwood with singular rapidity, or springs upon
a low branch of some tree, and reaches the summit by a suc-
cession of leaps from branch to branch. This latter peculiarity
renders it an easy prey to the sportsman.
MEGAPODIUS.
^'C
^mmr
\'' /4
','. '
.
f
//, -
,
^-irai^-,
holes seldom run straight, and often turn off at right angles
NATURAL HI STORY. 329
THE OSTRICH.
The STRUTHIONID/E include the Ostrich, Emu, Cassowary,
and Apteryx. The birds of this family are all remarkable ibr
the shortness of their wings, which are weak and unable to raise
them from the ground, but appear to assist them in running.
On this account Cuvier called the family Brevipennes, i. e. short-
winged birds.
The OSTRICH is the largest bird as
yet known to exist, its
height being from six to eight feet. It is an inhabitant of Africa,
and from thence the elegant plumes are brought. These plumes
are mostly obtained from the wings of the bird, and not from
the tail, as is generally imagined.
An immense number of eggs are laid by the Ostriches in one
spot, several birdsbelonging to each nest. The eggs are very
large and strong, and are
in general use by the Bosjesmans for
holding water. By means of these eggs, which they bury at
intervals in the sand, after, filling them with water, they are
enabled to make inroads across the desert and retreat with
security, as none can follow them for want of water. Each
egg holds rather more than five pints. An excellent omelet is
made by the natives, by burying the fresh egg in hot ashes, and
stirring round the contents with a stick through a hole in the
upper end, until thoroughly cooked.
The principal strength of the Ostrich tribe lies in the legs.
These limbs are so powerful that a swift horse has great diffi-
course.
The Ostrich is easily tamed, as those who have been
pursued by the magnificent birds in the Zoological Gardens
NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family a. . Struthionintc.
BTRUTHIO.
feet ;
believed that two hens often lay in one nest.
it is The
hatching of the eggs is not left, as is generally believed, to
the heat of the sun, but, on the contrary, the cock relieves
the hen in the incubation. These eggs form a considerable
item in the Bushmen's cuisine, and the shells are converted
into water flasks, cups, and dishes. I have often seen Bush-
girls and Bakalahari women, who belong to the wandering
Bechuana tribes of the Kalahari desert, come down to the
fountains from their remote habitations, sometimes situated
at an amazing distance, each carrying on her back a kaross
or a net-work containing from twelve to fifteen ostrich egg-
shells, which had been emptied by a small aperture at one
end these they fill with water and cork up the hole with
;
grass.
A favourite method adopted by the wild Bushman for
approaching the Ostrich arid other varieties of game, is to
clothe himself in the skin of one of these birds, in which,
taking care of the wind, he stalks about the plain, cunningly
imitating the gait and motions of the Ostrich, until within
range, when, with a well-directed poisoned arrow from his
tiny bow, he can generally seal the fate of any of the ordinary
varieties of game. These insignificant-looking arrows are
about two feet six inches in length they consist of a slender
;
ity of the fine are obtained which grace the heads of the
plumes
fair throughout the civilized world/'
The food of the Ostrich is vegetable, and it swallows many
stones, &c. to assist it in grinding its food. When in confine-
ment it picks up anything, glass, nails, &c., from the effects of
which it sometimes dies.^
Capt. Gumming remarks a fact not generally known, viz. the
care that the Ostrich takes of its young. It has generally been
supposed that after the eggs are laid, the female leaves them
to be hatched in the sun, and takes no more care for them.
The following anecdote would do honour to the far-famed Lap-
"
wing. I fell in with a troop of about twelve young ostrich-
CASUARIUS.
^
Casoar, the Cassoivary.
Cunningham says that dogs will seldom attack it, both en ac-
count of some peculiar odour in its flesh which they dislike,
and because the injuries inflicted upon them by striking out
with its feet are frequently very severe. The settlers even as-
sert that the Emu will break the small bone of a man's leg by
this sort of kick ;
to avoid which, the well-trained dogs run up
abreast, and make a sudden spring at their neck, whereby they
are quickly dispatched."
" which
Its flesh has been compared to coarse beef, it re-
sembles both in appearance and taste. There is but little
fit for culinary use upon any part of the Emu except the hind
quarters."
The voice of the Emu is a kind of low booming sound. The
eggs are six or seven in number, of a dark green colour, and
are much esteemed by the natives as food. AA hen the natives
take an Emu, they break its wings, a curious custom of no per-
ceptible utility. Young men and boys are not permitted to
eat the flesh of this bird.
THE APTERYX.
This extraordinary bird, whose name is derived from the ap-
parent absence of wings, those members being merely rudi-
mentary, inhabits Australia and the islands of New Zealand.
It conceals itself among the densest fern, and when hunted by
b.
Sub-family Aptcryyince.
ssag^
Australis (Lat. Australian,) the Aptcryx.
species. Latterly the question has been set at rest, not only
by the researches of Gould and other naturalists, but by the
arrival in this country of several skins * and one living speci-
men, now in the Zoological Gardens. This bird has a singular
habit of resting with the tip of its bill placed on the ground.
The nostrils of the APTERYX are placed almost at the very ex-
tremity of the bill. The aborigines of New Zealand give it the
name of Kiwi Kiwi. The food of the bird consists of snails,
insects, and worms, which latter creatures it obtains by striking
the ground with its feet, and seizing them on their appearance
at the surface.
* A small but well preserved skin is mounted in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
The rudimentary wings are very well shown. A skeleton is in the museum of the
College of Surgeons.
NATURAL HISTORY. 337
Sub-family c. Didince.
DIDUS.
the Dodo.
Ineptus (Lat, stupid),
OTUS.
length of the bird is rather more than three feet. Its nest is
a loose heap of straws on the ground, and contains two pale
brown eggs, spotted with brown, rather larger than those of the
turkey.
Order VII. .
GR^LLJE. (Lat. Stilted Birds.)
Family I. . . Cliaradrida\
Sub family c. Charadrincc.
V. \NELLUS.
The PLOVERS are known by their long legs, short toes, and
long and powerful wings. Many are inhabitants of England,
of which the Lapwing and Golden Plover are the most
common.
The LAPWING, or PEEWIT, is very common in most parts of
England, and is well known
plaintive cry, and the
for its
snails, frogs, and worms, but is not by any means averse to new-
ly sown The nest is made among reeds and rushes, and
grain.
contains two
bluish green eggs, marked with brown. The
length of the bird is nearly four feet.
342 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family c. . Ardcince.
ABDEA.
prey with him. The fixed patience that the Heron displays
has caused it to be chosen as the emblem of Solitude.
The plumes of the Heron were formerly considered as
ornaments only to be worn by the noble. It is not an
THE BITTERN.
The beautiful BITTERN has been almost banished from this
BOTAURUS.
PLATALEA. (Lat.)
eggs, slightly spotted with red. The length of the bird is not
quite three feet.
THE STORK.
The STORK is
extensively found throughout Europe, Asia,
and Africa. In Holland storks are very abundant, and are
encouraged by the Dutch to build in their towns. Among
the ruins of Persepolis they are very common, scarcely one
pillar being without a stork's nest at the summit. In
Holland a kind of false chimney is built by the inhabitants
for these birds to make their nests in. "When the Stork
cannot find a building on which to make its nest, it chooses
the flat spreading branches of a cedar or pine, and there
316 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family d. . . . Ciconince.
The Adjutant
of India, which is so useful in devouring ofFal
and vermin, is one of the Stork tribe. In the crop of one of
these birds was found a land tortoise, ten inches long, and
"
a large black male cat, entire."
NATURAL HISTORY. 347
Sub-family/. . Tantalina:.
Family III . . .
Scolopacidrc. (Gr. 2/coAo7ra, a Woodcock. Wood-
cock-kind.)
Sub-family a. . Limosince.
Sub-family c. Recurvirostrince.
d. Scolopadnce.
Sub-family
SCOLOPAX.
NUMENIUS. (Gr.
THE RUFF.
The HUFF and the
is celebrated for its pugnacious habits
singular change of its at certain seasons of the year.
plumage
Towards the breeding season a beautiful frill of long feathers
forms round the neck. It is a singular fact, that in hardly
and
any two of these birds is the frill of the same colour ;
THE JACANAS.
The JACANAS are found in Asia, Africa, and America. Their
light bodies and widely extended claws enable them to walk
on the leaves of aquatic plants with equal ease and safety.
As their weight is just sufficient to sink the leaf a little below
the surface, they have all the appearance of walking on the
NATURAL HISTORY. 353
PARRA. (Lat.)
THE CORNCRAKE.
The CORNCRAKE or LANDRAIL is very common in England.
It reaches us at the beginning of April, and leaves us at the
end of October, after hatching its eggs. During the early part
of the summer months its harsh cry may be heard in almost
every field, but the bird is very seldom seen, as it threads its
way among the long grass with marvellous rapidity. Its cry
354 NATURAL HISTORY.
Family V. . . Rallidse.
Sub-family a. . Rallince.
ORTYGOMETKA. (Gr. 'Oprvyop'/rpa, migrating with the Quails; the
Landrail.)
Crex (Gr. Kpe, a Crake; derived from its cry), Corncrake or Landrail.
THE WATER-HEK
The WATER-HEN, or MOOR-HEN, is very common along the
reedy banks of rivers and ponds. It is very widely distributed,
Sub-family b. GallinulincB.
GALLINULA. (Lat.)
THE FLAMINGO.
The FLAMINGO is an inhabitant of the warmer parts of
Europe, and is common in Asia and the coasts of Africa. The
singularly shaped beak of this splendid bird is peculiarly
adapted to its long and flexible neck. When the bird wishes
to feed, it merely stoops its head to the water the upper ;
1
'ub-family c. Anserlncc.
the shell gapeth open, and the first thing that appeareth is the
foresaid lace or string ; next- come the legs of the bird hanging
out, and as it grow eth greater it openeth the shell by degrees,
r
till at
length it is all come forth and hangeth only by the
bill : in short space after it commeth to full maturitie, and
faileth into the sea, where it gathereth feathers, and groweth
to a fowle."
Of the TAME GOOSE, Anser ferns, nothing need be said,
except that enormous flocks are bred in Lincolnshire, con-
taining from two to ten thousand birds each. The birds are
periodically subjected to the operation of plucking out the
quill-feathers, in order to supply the vast demand for pens, &c.
THE SWAX.
The MUTE or TAME SWAN, a well-known ornament to our
lakes and rivers, is not an inhabitant of England, but was in-
troduced from Eastern Europe and Asia, several hundred years
back. All are familiar with the graceful deportment of this
bird while sailing on the surface of the w ater.
r
Unfortunately
its progress on land by no means corresponds with its aquatic
Sub-family d. Cygnince.
AV 1, ,
^
and the Dyers' and Vintners' Companies own the greater part of
the swans on the Thames, and their swans are annually mark-
ed on the bills by men termed Swan-uppers, or hoppers. The
mark of the Vintners' Company is a notch or nick at each side
"
of the bill, from which arose the term, swans with two nicks,"
"
corrupted into necks."
'
Like a Black Swan," was formerly a well known proverb,
analogous to the Horse Marines of the present day unfortu- :
Q
NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family c. Anatince.
ANAS.
A third peck but this time the cock sees his enemy, and
rushes at him furiously. Down flops the duck on the ground,
and lets the cock pass over him. After running over him
once or twice, and then jumping on him, the cock is persuaded
that his enemy is quite dead, and walks off on the tips of his
toes.
Presently the duck first opens one eye and then the other,
gets up and quietly pecks the cock again. The same ma-
noeuvres are repeated, until at last the duck wins, like Fabius,
by delay, and drives his antagonist fairly off the field.
* Wilson's Ornithology, vol. viii. p. 114.
361 NATURAL HISTORY.
.
(Lat.)
Sub-family/. Fuligullnce.
r"~-'^C' .VSa,
-
'
/^\
flash, and do not reappear for nearly two hundred yards, and
then they merely raise their head above water for a second,
and again disappear.
All the Grebes feed upon fishes and the various water
insects, but their stomachs are almost invariably found to
3GG NATURAL HISTORY
Sub-family b .
Podiccpincc.
FODICEPS.
PODICEPJ5.
f '^
chicks are kept, if they are startled at anything, they all disaj -
pear as if by magic, and reappear in the same mysterious mai
-
the sharpest eye cannot detect them as they hide under floating
herbage, or are sheltered by an overhanging bank.
It is easily domesticated, and is often seen placed as an or-
nament in lakes, or even in ponds, where it swims about very
merrily, and seems to enjoy playing a game at hide-and-seek
with any observer who is attempting to watch its movements.
368 NATURAL HISTORY.
Sub-family a. Alcina.
FIUTERCULA. (Lat.)
ALUA.
c.
Sub-family Rphcniscince.
Sub-family d. Urince.
Troile, the
Sub-family a. Proccllarince.
and blubber of dead whales and other cetacea, and also of mol-
lusksand Crustacea. The length
o of the bird is sixteen inches.
"
It is indeed an interesting
C sight
CD
to observe these little birds
in a gale, coursing over the waves, down the declivities, up the
ascents of the foaming surf that threatens to bend over their
heads ; sweeping along the hollow troughs of the sea, as in a
sheltered valley, and again mounting with the rising billow,
and just above its surface, occasionally dropping its feet, which,
striking the water, throws it up again with additional force ;
its
faculty of standing and even running on the surface cf the
water, which it performs with apparent facility. "When any
greasy matter is thrown overboard, these birds instantly collect
round it, and facing to windward, with their long wings ex-
panded and their Avebbed feet patting the water, the lightness
of their bodies and the action of the wind on their wings en-
able them to do this with ease. In calm weather they per-
form the same manoeuvre by keeping their wings just so much
in action as to prevent their feet from sinking below the sur-
face. According to Buflbn, it is from this singular habit that
the whole genus have obtained the name Petrel, from the
apostle Peter, who, as Scripture informs us, also walked on the
water."*
* Wilson's Ornithology, vol. vii. p. S2.
374 NATURAL HISTORY.
"
The powers of flight of the Wandering Albatros are much
greater than those of any other bird that has come under my
observation. Although during calm or moderate weather it
sometimes on the surface of the water, it is almost
rests
before the wind frequently sails more than 200 miles in the
twenty-four hours, and that for days together, still the Albatros
has not the slightest difficulty in keeping up with the ship, hut
also performs circles of many miles in extent, returning again
to hunt up the wake of the vessel for any substances thrown
overboard."
Thevoracity of the Albatros renders it an easy prey. A
hook isbaited with a piece of blubber, fastened firmly to a
string, and suffered to tow astern. The bird immediately
sweeps down to seize its prey, and is arrested by the hook, by
means of which it is drawn into the ship. The best descrip-
tion of the nidification of the
wandering Albatrcs is that given
by Mr. Earl, quoted by Gould.
Mr. Earl after climbing a fearfully dangerous precipice in the
Island of Tristan d'Acunha arrived at a large plain of dark
grey lava, on the summit of which the nests of the Albatrcs
were made. " A death-like stillness prevailed in these high
regions, and to my ear our voices had a strange unnatural echo,
and I fancied our forms appeared gigantic, whilst the air was
piercing cold. The prospect was altogether sublime, and filled
the mind with awe. The huge Albatros here appeared to
dread no interloper or enemy for their young were on the
;
is
entirely white, and covered with a woolly down, which is
very beautiful. As we approached, they snapped their beaks
with a very quick motion, making a great noise this and the
;
Sub-family b. Larirnc.
Sub-family c. Sicrnince.
STERNA.
Sub-family b. . Phactonince.
continue on the wing for whole days and nights, but some-
times rests on the back of a turtle sleeping at the surface of
the water. The length of the Tropic Bird is about eighteen
inches.
Sub-family c. Pelecanince.
si: LA
, .
(
:
\ .
i
V'
,
'
,.'
,
.
>
',r N
"
First raising his body nearly perpendicular, down he plunges
into the deep, and after staying there a considerable time
he is sure to bring up a fish, which he invariably swallows head
foremost. Sometimes half an hour elapses before he can
manage to accommodate a large eel quietly in his stomach.
You see him straining violently with repeated efforts to gulp
it, and when you fancy that the slippery mouthful is success-
NATURAL HISTORY. 381
TELECANT'S.
FREGATA.
GECKO.
IGUANA.
THE CHAMELEON.
The COMMON CHAMELEON is plentifully found in northern
but every one who has watched a Chameleon for any time, will
be equally ready to eat him the moment that he turns white.
The power of the Chameleon to move its eyes in different
directions, gives it a most singular aspect. Its enormously long
tongue can be withdrawn into the mouth when not in use, but
when the creature sees a fly within reach, the tongue is instant-
ly darted forth, and by means of a gummy secretion at
the tip
secures the fly. The whole movement is so quick as almost to
elude the eve.
330 NATURAL HISTORY.
tably mortal, and death always ensues within a few hours after
its bite.
"
When a man is ranging a forest, and sees a serpent gliding
towards him (which is a very rare occurrence), he has only to
tack off in a side direction, and he may be perfectly assured
that it will not follow him. Should the man, however, stand
still, and should the snake be one of those overgrown monsters
the place where the man was standing, would raise the fore-
part of its body in a retiring attitude, and then dart at him
and seize him. A man may pass within a yard of rattle- snakes
with safety, provided he goes quietly but should he irritate a
;
* This latter
passage refers to a plate in Awlubon's Ornithology, where a rattle-
snake is represented attacking a mocking-bird's nest, and threatening the birds with
two 1'angs curved upwards a mistake which Waterton never loses sight of.
392 NATURAL HISTORY.
II.
Family Viperidas.
d.
\-::/
^
. x ,' /, I
im
SsMs'zlf J A k
/\ ,
rub
/,. //// '
ship."
The same author remarks in his "Five Years' Residence in
South Africa," that its (the puff adder's) bite will kill occa-
sionally within an hour.
"
One of my friends lost a favourite and valuable horse by
its bite in less than two hours after the attack. It is a slug-
The CERASTES
is a well-known snake in
Egypt, and derives
its name from
the horny scale over each eyebrow. Bruce
mentions that the Cerastes can spring several feet in any
394 NATURAL HISTORY.
direction but his description of the stratagems employed by
;
it,"to surprise any one who is too far from it," is probably
more fanciful than correct, as snakes do not attack unless
suddenly surprised or irritated. The size of the Cerastes is by
no means great, as its average length is only eighteen inches.
The snake charmers of Egypt employ these reptiles precisely
as their brethren of India employ the Cobra de Capello.
Berus, t/tc
Viper.
Frogs, lizards, mice, and other small animals, form the food
of this reptile, but sometimes it falls a victim to its own vorac-
ity.
In the Magazine of Natural History, a viper is mentioned
which had swallowed a lizard nearly as large as itself, and one
ofwhose legs was protruding from its side.
In former times, preparations from vipers, and especially
viper-broth, were in great request as medicines.
Family Y. Colubrulte.
NAJA.
* A Cobra in
the Zoological Gardens was a long time in learning caution. It was
accustomed to lie coiled up at the bottom of the cage until a spectator came close,
when it invariably darted at him, of course striking its nose against the glass with
no small violence. On my first visit to the Reptile House after its arrival, it made
its customary attack, and after the
space of a week, it again struck at rne. On a
visit, several months afterwards, it laid very quietly at the bottom of its cage, and
contented itself with a hiss.
303 NATURAL HISTORY.
x. T.-!1. a ]]
'
I ,
,;
Ti:-Tur>o.
1
i
'
r--^. \ ^- ^ - -
V
\
'
\ \
'
-
'
X'Si-!^-
Family Y. Clieloniadse.
CHELONIA.
The Green Turtle has been known to reach the weight of five
hundred pounds. The tortoiseshell of commerce is almost
or six
THE CROCODILE.
These animals are separated from the Lizards on account
of the peculiar horny covering with which they are pro-
tected.
The CROCODILE is an inhabitant of the Old "World, the
ALLIGATOR of the New, and the two animals arc best dis-
tinguished by the construction of the jaws. In the Crocodiles
the lower canine teeth fit into a notch in the edge of the upper
jaw, and there is in consequence a contraction of the muzzle
just behind the nostrils. The lower canine teeth of the Alli-
gators fit into a,
pit in the edge of the upper jaw, and in con-
402 NATURAL HISTORY.
CROCODILU3.
V -
.1 Y\ '1 Jl
'vi
-.
:
'.
^1toW^\\i\W,A \y I iv
A\l
THE ALLIGATOR.
The ALLIGATOR, or CAYMAN, is an inhabitant of the New
World, and is unpleasantly common in the rivers of North
America. It pursues fish with exceeding dexterity, by driving
a shoal of them into a creek, and then plunging amid the
terrified mass, and devouring its victims at its pleasure. It
ALLIGATOR.
me for a bridle.
"
He now seemed to have recovered from his surprise, and
probably fancying himself in hostile company, he began to
plunge furiously, and lashed the sand with his long and pow-
erful tail. I was out of reach of the strokes of it, by being near
his head. He continued to plunge and strike, and made my
seat very uncomfortable."
In Audubon's American Ornithology is an account of a
wounded ibis chased by the alligators. A white ibis had been
shot, and had fallen into the water with a broken winn-.
'
The exertions which it made to reach the shore seemed to
awake the half torpid alligators that lay in the deep mud at
the bottom of the pool. One showed his head above the
water, then a second and third. All gave chase to the
wounded bird, which, on seeing its dreaded and deadly fees,
made double speed towards the very spot where we stood. I
was surprised to see how much faster the bird swam than the
reptiles, who, with jaws widely opened, urged their heavy
bodies through
C3
the water. The ibis was now within a few
yards of us. It was the alligator's last chance. Springing
forwards, as it were, lie raised his body almost cut of the
water ;
his jaws nearly touched the terrified bird, when, by
pulling three triggers at once, we lodged the contents of cur
guns in the throat of the monster. Threshing furiously with
his tail, and rolling his body in agony, the alligator at last
sunk to the mud
and the ibis, as if in gratitude, walked to
;
our very feet, and then lying down, surrendered himself to us."
Like the Crocodile, the Alligator lays its eggs in the sandy
bank of the river. Fortunately, but few of the young ever
reach maturity, as their ranks are thinned by various birds
and beasts of prey before the eggs are hatched, and by the at-
tacks of large fishes, and even their own species, when they
have reached the water.
406 NATURAL HISTORY.
'
Class IV. . . AMPHIBIA. (Gr. , leading a double life, i.e. on
land and on water.)
Order I. . .
BATRACHIA.(&\\ Bdrpaxog, a Frog.)
Sub-order I. SALIENTIA. (Lat. Leaping animals.)
The appearance and habits of the FROG and the TOAD are
so familiar as to require but little description. A short ac-
count, however, is
necessary, of the peculiarities common to
both Frogs and Toads.
In the early stage of their existence, these animals are
termed tadpoles. They at first appear to be nothing but head
and tail, but after several days have passed, four legs are ob-
served to become developed. These rapidly increase, and the
little creature
closely resembles a small eft. In due time,
however, the tail is lost, and the creature becomes a perfect
frog. Another important change also takes place. In its tad-
pole state the creature was essentially a water animal, but after
its change has taken place it is not able to exist under water
for any great length of time, and is forced to come to the sur-
face to breathe.
The tongue of the Frog is curiously fixed almost at the
NATURAL HISTORY. 407
*
In February, 1852, two frogs were dug out of the play-ground of Magdalen School,
Oxford. They were about a foot from the surface of the ground, and their habitation
was quite smooth. Both were sitting with their mouths pointed upwards, but I could
not ascertain if there had been auy communication with the open air.
403 NATURAL HISTORY.
The COMMON TOAD has had its full share of marvellous tales.
Its poisonous properties are celebrated in many an ancient
chronicle, as are also the virtues of the jewel contained in its
head.
Its skin certainly does secrete an acrid humour, which at all
events defends it from dogs, who can never be induced to bite
a toad a second time but of course such absurd notions as the
;
romantic story of the death of a young lady and her lover, who
each ate a leaf of a shrub at the root of which a toad had made
its no refutation.
habitation, need
The Toad is tamed. A correspondent from the coun-
easily
try has kindly sent an account of a tame toad,
that had lived
in the family for several years, and which was accustomed to
Buckland in 1825, and from whom all air was cut off, died be-
fore a year's imprisonment. The Toad casts its skin at certain
times, but we never find the slough as we do that of the snake,
as the toad invariably swallows its former covering.
the surface of the earth, \vhcre no ray of light can possibly enter.
The eyes of this singular creature are mere points covered with
skin, and useless for vision indeed when in captivity it always
;
Family!.. .
Triglidre. (Gr. TptyJla, a Mullet.)
TRIGLA.
the fact :
period.
This fish has often been confounded by voyagers with the
true Flying-fish (Exocadiis), which belongs to an entirely dif-
ferent order.
PERCA.
ble row of spinous rays belonging to the first dorsal fin have
wounded the hands of many an incautious angler.
It is extremely voracious, so much so that after all the
NATURAL HISTORY. 415
Tunny.)
SCOMCLK.
Faber (Lat. a Workman; sometimes used fur t!tcjh;h), the John Dory.
honour. Other traditions are quite as vigorous in their asser-
tion, that St. Christopher produced these marks while crossing
an arm of the sea, bearing the Saviour in his arms.
The singular fish called the SEA-HORSE has often been found
off the southern coasts of England. The habits of this fish
120 NATURAL .HIS TORY.
are very singular and interesting. A pair were kept alive for
some time in a glass vessel, and exhibited considerable activity
and intelligence. They swam about with an undulating kind
of movement, and frequently twined their tails round the
weeds placed in their prison. Their eyes moved independent-
ly of each other,
as those of the chameleon, and the change-
able tints of the head closely resemble that animal.
More than once, these curious fish have been seen curled up
in oyster shells.
The singular creatures called Pipe-fish also belong to the
Syngnathidse.
'
-
i
NATURAL HISTORY. 421
"
Small fish appeared to abound at this anchorage (the
Calvados group of islands). I had never before seen the
with his efforts, he lay quiet for a little. Seeing the float, the
shark got it into his mouth, and disengaging the sucker by a
tug on the line, made a bolt at the fish but his puny antago-
;
nist was again too quick, and, fixing himself close behind the
dorsal fin, defied the efforts of the shark to disengage him, al-
though he rolled over and over, lashing the water with his tail
until it foamed all around. "What the final result was, we
could not clearly make out."
THE ANGLER.
The ANGLER, or FISHING FROG, as it is more generally
sea, and by the movement of its pectoral fins stirs up the sand
and mud, and agitates the bony appendages amid the turbid
cloud produced. The small fishes, observing the muddy water,
and taking the filaments for worms, approach to seize them,
and are instantly engulphed in the capacious jaws of the crafty
Angler.
The voracity of the Angler is so great, that when caught in
a net together with other fish, it generally devours some of its
fellow-prisoners a useless act, for the fishermen mostly open
its stomach and recapture the flounders and other fish found in
its interior.
THE CART.
The Malacopterygian fishes have their fin membranes sup-
ported by flexible rays. The Abdominal Malacopterygii have
their ventral fins situated on the belly, without any connexion
with the bones of the shoulder.
The COMMON CARP is a well-known inhabitant of our ponds,
lakes, and sluggish rivers. It is a very shy and wary fish
NATURAL HISTORY. 423
Oder II. . . .
3IALACOPTERYGil.(Gi\ MC^G/COT, soft;
-
a fin.)
i:'ul>-order I. ABDOMINALIA. (Lat. belonging to the abdomen.)
CYPRINTS.
-
/-.r
w0li :
f ;
.
-
'
'llffl
.-
,X ,/.- ,
T ^-'_ ^-5<^=i-^-.^
rejecting one day a bait which had been freely taken the day
previous.^
It lives toa great age, and when very old its scales turn grey
just as human hairs do. In several places in France numbers
of Carp were kept until they attained an enormous size. These
great sluggish fish were accustomed to come to the water's
edge in order to be fed at the call of their keeper. Feeding the
Carp was almost a hereditary amusement of the latter kings of
France.
Very few fish are so tenacious of life as the Carp. It is the
custom in Holland to keep these fish in nets filled with wet
moss. They are fed with bread and milk, and are preserved
in health by frequent immersion in water, in order to keep the
moss thoroughly wet.
Two or three pounds is the average weight of a good Carp,
but individuals have been known weighing upwards of eigh-
* In
1847, while fishing in a small pond near Oxford, I took in one hour six or
seven carp, weighing ^irom half a pound to nearly three pounds each. A few days
afterwards, although the weather was equally propitious, the carp were not, and the
whole day was spent without even a bite.
424 NATURAL HISTORY.
teen pounds. It is enormously prolific, as the roe of one
female weighing nine pounds was found to contain six hundred
thousand eggs. Of course comparatively few of these eggs
arrive at maturity, by far the greater number being eaten by
other fish.
CYPRINUS.
gland is
only found in certain rivers and lakes, such as the
42G NATURAL HISTORY.
THE TENCH.
The habits of the TENCH are not unlike those of the carp,
excepting that itseems even more sluggish than that fish,
tt
especially delights in muddy banks of ponds, where the
NATURAL HISTORY. 427
LEUCISCUS. (Gr.AevKioKoc; ;
from /\ew/cof, white.)
theft. A quick eye and a dexterous hand are required for this
sport. The float is so balanced as barely to appear above the
surface of the water, for, unlike the perch, that dashes at the
bait and boldly jerks the float at once under water, the Roach
does little more than swim under the bait as far as it can, and
then just gives a gentle nibble, repeating the process until the
bait has entirely left the hook.
The BLEAK and the MINNOW both belong to the genus Leu-
ciscus. The former fish is remarkable for the use made of its
scales, which when washed in water deposit a powder much
used in the manufacture of artificial pearls.
NATURAL HISTORY. 429
LEUCISCL'S.
ESOX.
THE FLYING-FISH.
This fish, so celebrated in most books of voyages, is found
in the warmer latitudes, but has several times been seen off
our coasts. The so-called "flight" is very similar to that of
the flying squirrels and dragons, the fish merely springing
out of the water with a violent impetus, and sustaining itself
in the air by means of its enormous pectoral fins. It is not
able to alter its course while in the air, nor to rise a second
time without repeating its course through the water. The
reader will notice the remarkable fact, that individuals of three
wingless classes, the Mammalia, the Reptiles, and the Fishes,
have each the power of sustaining themselves in the air.
The "flight" of this fish seldom exceeds two hundred yards.
The unfortunate creatures are pursued in the water by " Dora-
dos," erroneously called dolphins, and other fishes of prey. To
escape their finny tyrants, they spring into the air, and for a
while escape. But the gulls and aibatroses are on the watch,
* In the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford was
is a Pike weighing thirty pounds, that
taken in the lake at Blenheim Park.
432 NATURAL HISTORY
Exoc(ETus. (Gr. 'E^tjuoiro^, sleeping out [of the sea].)*
and pounce on the FLYING -FISH from above, so that the perse-
cuted creatures are tolerably sure to fall a prey to one or the
other of their foes.
The usual height
C^
of flight
CJ
is about two or three feet above
THE SALMON.
The SALMON is a migratory fish, annually leaving the sea,
Salar.
antagonist.
SALMO.
especially if there
should be little falls at intervals. The Der-
went and the Dove are particularly famous for their trout.
The latter river is quite the beau ideal of a trout stream. It
never seems to know its own mind for half a mile together.
Sometimes it is rapid, frisking over stones and round trees, and
throwing up the sparkling foam in all directions. Presently it
has changed into a silent, slow, melancholy river, with dark
CLTJPBA.
the " tuck sean," about a furlong in length, and a hundred and
twenty feet in depth, the average value of the two nets being
500Z.
When the fishermen see a shoal of pilchards approaching,
NATURAL HISTORY. 437
CLUPEA.
Many thousand tons' weight of sprats are annually used for this
purpose.
The White-bait belongs to the same family.
NATURAL HISTORY. 439
'
Encrasicholus (Gr. of, iuixo-1 with bitter; the Anchovy, from
its taste), the Anchovy.
usually from, four to five inches, but it has been seen measuring
upwards of seven inches.
THE COD.
In this Sub-order the bones of the ventral fins are placed
under, and support the bones of the shoulder.
The well-known COD-FISH is principally found on the coasts
of Newfoundland, but is taken in great numbers on our own
shores. The hook is generally employed for the capture of this
fine fish. An immense number of hooks, each baited with a
whelk or limpet and attached to short lines, are fastened at
intervals along a rope, which is stretched, or shot, as
it is termed,
across the tide, in order to
prevent the hooks from getting en-
tangled. Such is the voracity of the fish, that nearly five hun-
dred fish have been taken
by one man in the course of ten
hours. The intense cold renders the Cod fishery a service of
great hardship.
410 NATURAL HISTORY.
MORRI1VA.
Callarias (Gr. ),
tne Cod.
they feed. In the winter, while they are lying torpid in the
inud, multitudes are taken by spears many-pronged instru-
ments, whose prongs are leathered with recurved barbs, which,
when pushed into the mud, entangle the eels, and effectually
prevent their escape.
There are supposed to be four species of English eel name- ;
GYMNOTUS.
"
I tried about twenty different times to grasp it with my
THE STURGEON.
The remaining fishes belong to the Cartilaginous sub-class ;
that is, their skeletons are composed of cartilage, and not of true
bone.
The first sub-order possess free gill-covers like those of all the
448 NATURAL HISTORY.
ACIPENSER.
made of the roe of the female, and the flesh is extensively pre-
served both by pickling and salting, besides the large quantities
that are consumed fresh. The flavour of its flesh is said not to
be unlike veal.
It has
occasionally been taken 011 our coasts, usually by
entangling itself in the nets, and although it then does some
injury to the nets by its violent struggles to release itself, it
is otherwise perfectly harmless. Yarrel mentions that a
sturgeon measuring eight feet six inches in length, and weigh-
ing two hundred and three pounds, was taken in a stake net
near Findhon in 1833. A
specimen was once caught in the
Esk, weighing four hundred and sixty pounds. The female
NATURAL HISTORY. 449
always deposits her eggs in fresh water, and the young, when
hatched, descend to the sea, and are supposed not to return
again until, in their turn, they seek the fresh water in order to
deposit their spawn.
SCYLLIUM.
II.
Family Squalidic.
SQUALUS. (Lat. a Shark.)
had " stowed away," and the substances thus brought to light
have been most curious. The entire contents of a lady's
work-basket, down to the scissors, were found in the interior
of one shark, and another had actually swallowed an entire
bull's hide a circumstance which led the operating sailor to
remark that the shark had sw allowed a bull, but could not
r
"
disgest" the hide.
The amphibious South Sea Islanders stand in great dread
of the Shark, and with good reason, for not a year elapses
without several falling victims to the rapacity of this terrific
animal. Nearly thirty of the natives of the Society Islands
were destroyed at one time by the sharks. storm had so A
injured the canoe in which they were passing
from one island
to another, that they were forced to take refuge on a raft
it until one hundred men had been pulling at the rope for
Montagu quaintly remarks, that had it not been dead, the fisher-
man would certainly have had a shock that would have made
him remember the species again.
RAJA.
The RAYS are at first sight not unlike the turbot and sole,
but a closer examination will show that the Rays really swim
with their backs upwards, whereas the turbot swims on its side.
The m wement of the Ray is very curious, and is admirably
"
express by the word sluddering" used by an old fisherman.
^d
The SKATE is caught in abundance on our shores, and in
Englau 1 is much used as an article of food, although in Scotland
it is us."! principally for bait.
NATURAL HISTORY. 455
PETROMYZOX.
LAMPETUA.
Family II.
Myxinidse.
The Mollusca have neither spine nor bones, the nervous sys-
tem consisting of a number of nervous knobs called" ganglia,"
which give off filamentous nerves in different directions.
Few Molluscs possess eyes, but in one or two, as the snails
and slugs, those organs are to be found, and in the higher
Molluscs, such as the Cuttle-fish, we see not only large and
brilliant eyes, but also organs of hearing.
The Cephalopoda, so called by the organs of movement sur-
rounding the head, are divided into naked and testaceous,* or
covered with a shell.
The COMMON CUTTLE-FISH is an example of a naked cephal-
opodous mollusc. This repulsive looking creature is common en
our shores, and is, in spite of its unpleasant appearance, often
* Derived from Lat. testa, a shell.
NATURAL HISTORY. 459
off under shelter of the dense cloud of its own creating. Dr.
Buckland actually drew a portrait of a fossil Cuttle-fish with
some of its own ink that still remained in its body.
The substance sold in the shops as cuttle-fish bone is a
chalky substance secreted from the mouth of the fish, and com-
posed of an infinite number of plates, joined by myriads of
little pillars.^
The entire body is soft, and encased in a coarse, leather-like
skin, unprotected by any shell.
TUE NAUTILUS.
The ARGONAUT, or NAUTILUS, is an example of the testaceous
Molluscs. This curious creature, about which so many mar-
vellous and poetical tales have been told, is very abundant in
the Mediterranean.
It has been clearly proved that the Nautilus does not urge
itself along the surface of the water by the expanded arms
used as sails. These arms are in fact used to cover the shell,
* At a meeting of the Ashmolean Society at Oxford, Dr. Buckland, while exhib-
iting some relics of a huge fossil Saurian, said, " I know where that fellow lived, I
know where he died, and moreover, I know what he had for dinner on the day that
he died. He had a cuttle-fishtfor dinner, and here is its bony ring, which I found in
the Saurian's stomach."
400 NATURAL HISTORY.
HELIX.
CONU3.
ARICIA.
stalls of the metropolis exposed for sale, like the oyster and
periwinkle.
The proboscis of this creature is of a most singular structure,
and by means of the numerous teeth with which it is armed,
rapidly to bore its way through shells, and
it is able then to
feed upon the unfortunate inmate. The hermit crab often
takes possession of the empty shells of the "Whelk.
The famous Tyrian purple was obtained from one of the
Buccinidse, Purpura imbricata.
u*
466 NATURAL HISTORY.
Family, Muricidse. (Lat. Murcx, the purple shell-fish.)
MUREX.
Order. . .
CYCLOBRANCHIATA.(G\\ ,
a circle ;
gills.)
PATELLA.
PECTEX.
earthy deposit, which, when boiled in nitric acid in order to dissolve the animal and
other portions, exhibits under a powerful microscope animalcules precisely similar
to those which, in a fossil state, form the earth on which the town of Richmond in
America i.3 built.
NATURAL HISTORY. 4C9
"
we find that our Native Oysters" were exported to Rome, and
there placed in the Lucrine Lake, where they were fattened.
On our coasts the oysters breed in large beds, to which vast
quantities of young oysters are conveyed by the fishermen, and
suffered to increase without molestation. Newly-formed beds
are untouched for two or three years.
During the months of
May, June, and July,* the oysters breed, and are considered
unfit for food. At this time the young, called " spat," are
deposited in enormous numbers. They instantly adhere to the
substance among which they fall and this, whatever it be, is
;
"
called cultch," and is protected by severe penalties. About
May the fishermen separate the spawn from the cultch, which
is then thrown back into its former After May it is
place.
felony to disturb the cultch, as were it removed, mussels and
cockles would rapidly take the place of the oysters.
The oysters are taken in the proper season by the " dredge,"
a kind of small net fastened round an iron frame- work, which
scoops up the oysters and many pther marine animals.
The part of the Oyster called the " beard," is in reality the
respiratory apparatus.
weight tied to their feet. They rapidly gather all the Pearl
Oysters in their way into a basket, and when in want of air,
give a signal to their friends above, who draw them to the
surface by a rope. The Oysters are then left to putrefy for
some weeks, when they are carefully washed, and the pearls
extracted.
* Most people are acquainted with the proverb, that oysters are in season durir-r
the months in which is the letter R.
470 NATURAL HISTORY.
MELEAGRIXA.
THE MUSSEL.
The SEA MUSSELS are usually fixed where the tide leaves
them alternately wet and dry, and it is worthy of notice that
those " shell-fish" which are exposed to variations of this kind
are enabled to close their shells so firmly as to prevent, any
evaporation. One species is extensively used as an article of
food.
NATURAL HISTORY. 471
Family,
J*Mytilidse.
V (Gr.
* MurtApr, a Mussel.)f
MTTILUS.
PEXTALASMIS.
nor is it until a week or two has passed, that they finally settle
themselves.
The name Anatifera or Goose-bearing, has been given to
this animal on account of the ancient story of the production
of the Bernicle-goose. This fable has already been related
under the article, Bernicle-goose.
NATURAL HISTORY. 473
CANCER.
* So called
because their shell is soft compared with that of the univalve or bivalve
molluscs.
474 NATURAL HISTORY.
Their method of growth is very curious. Other animals as
they increase in size experience no particular inconvenience
Not so the Crustacea. Their bodies are closely enveloped in a
strong, unyielding mail, which
cannot grow with them. Their
armour is therefore cast off every year, .and a fresh coat formed
1o suit their increased dimensions. Not only is the armour
cast off, but even the covering of the eyes, the tendons of the
claws, and the lining membrane of ike stomach, with its
teeth.
shakes off the* injured joint, and a new one soon takes its place.
Lobsters, when alarmed, frequently throw off their claws.
The Decapods, as their name imports, are the fortunate
possessors of ten legs, five at each They also possess
side.
three pairs of jaws, besides the teeth in the stomach. They
breathe means of branchiae or gills, fixed at each side of
by
the throat, or chest, often erroneously called the head.*
The COMMON CRAB belongs to the short-tailed Decapods.
It is abundently taken on our coasts by fishermen, who employ
" creel" or
for its capture a wicker basket called a crab-pot.
The crab-pots are made each with an aperture which permits
the animal to enter, but forbids its egress -just like a common
wire mouse-trap. A piece of a fish is fastened at the bottom
of the creel, and the whole apparatus let down to the bottom
of the sea, guarded by a line connected with a float, by means
cf which the fishermen draw it up and then remove its con-
tents. Each float has a peculiar mark, by which the fisher-
man knows his own. When taken, the crabs are kept alive
in well-boats, until wanted.
* These animals have no distinct head; that and the thorax being merged into
what naturalists call " ccphclo-tjiorax," or head-thorax.
NATURAL HISTORY. 475
Family III. .
Paguridse. (Gr. TIr/yvvui, to fix; ovpu a tail.)
TAG! RUS.
by but
itself, more often the deserted habitations of water-rats.
In rocky situations it lives under and among the stones. The
excellence and delicacy of its flesh causes it to be much sought
after. The usual method of catching these animals is by low-
ering a net to the bottom of the water, baited with a piece
of
meat. The cray-fish soon discover this and come in numbers
to the bait, when the net is suddenly hauled up, and most of
the cray-fish secured. Some, however, escape by darting off
backwards, a movement produced by the violent bending of
their tails. It is a favourite amusment with boys to search
for them in their holes, and drag them from their conceal-
ment.
NATURAL HISTORY 477
ASTACUS.
foremost.
The grasp of the lobster's claw is so tight that to break
off the claws is often the only method of disengaging its
hold.
Although enormous quantities are destroyed every year they
are so prolific that the supply never fails.
The so-called lady's-fingers of the Lobster are its breathing
apparatus.
478 NATURAL HISTORY.
CRANGOX.
skim over the surface of the waters, and snatch up the drown-
ing and helpless fly together with many others, whose form
;
* " Formicarum
defectu, ipsas c nidis tolltint aviculas, omnemque corpusculio
cruorem exsugunt." Merian. Mot. Insect. Sur. p. If?,
t
" Persuasum mini ab Indis est " Id. p. 49.
NATURAL HISTORY. 48i
THE SCORPION.
These formidable creatures inhabit most of the hotter parts
of the globe. They are quite as pugnacious as the spiders, and
if several are placed in one box, they will fight until few sur-
ACARUS.
bly larger, and their organs can be distinguished with the naked
eye. In this order are included the common cheese mite, the
harvest-bug, the water rnites, &c.
NATURAL HISTORY. 483
CICIXDELA.
'
I
long, sharp, curved like a sickle, and armed with several teeth.
Its eyes are large and prominent, enabling it to see on all bides.
Its length is rather more than half an inch.
*
This, as well as the general covering of insects, is composed principally of a
substance called by chemists, chit me.
NATURAL HISTORY. 485
This curious beetle derives its name from its habit of bury-
ing any small dead animal left on the surface of the ground.
AYith such rapidity does it work, that two beetles have been
known to cover up a sparrow within a few hours and so un- ;
486 NATURAL HISTORY.
wearied are they, that if several Burying-beetles are placed in
a vessel rilled with earth, and kept constantly supplied with
dead frogs, mice, &c., they will continue to bury them as long
as the supply is kept up. The object of this remarkable in-
the young
stinct, so beneficial in its effects, is to furnish food for
who are hatched from eggs laid in the body of the animal dur-
ing its burial. In this way innumerable carcasses which would
pollute the atmosphere are removed, and made beneficial to
the soil.
dung, and then buries the whole mass in the ground. When
caught, it
pretends to be dead.f
The COCKCHAFFER needs not much description. Its larva
works great mischief during the spring, as it ieeds on the roots
of plants, and cuts them off with its sharp sickle-like jaws.
Where many of these " grubs" have been, the grass curls up,
and dries like hay. One farmer actually collected eighty bush-
els of the grubs of the Cockchaffer on his farm. Fortunately
the thrushes, blackbirds, rooks, and many other birds are invete-
rate destroyers of the grubs, and devour myriads of them. It
is for this
purpose that these birds pull up the grass, and not to-
spoil or devour the herbage, as
generally supposed. is
LAMPYRIS.
which it cleanses its body from dust or the slime of the snails
on which it frequently feeds.
THE DEATH-WATCH.
The formerly terrible DEATH-WATCH, is now generally
known to be merely a small beetle.
Indeed it is nothing
more than the creature that perforates the round holes in old
"
worm-eaten" furniture and wood- work. The " ticking"
is produced by striking the head against the wood. If there
is a Death-Watch in the room, it is easy to incite it to begin
Family, Ptimdas.
ANOBIUJI.
and more than once, when the creature has been recently feed-
ing upon putrid substances, dangerous results have followed.
A small moth, Adela de Geerella, possesses the same peculiarity. The length of
*
the moth is about a quarter of an inch, and the length of the antennas more than an
inch and a half. The antennas wave about with every breath of air, as if the insect
had become entangled in a spider's web, and escaped with some of the loose threads
floating about it.
NATURAL HISTORY. 491
beetles. These last inhabit the water, and swim with re-
markable activity. They occasionally come to the surface for
a fresh supply of air, which they carry down between the ely-
tra and the upper surface of the abdomen. They fly very
well, but the construction of their limbs prevents them from
walking. They cannot be kept in a limited space, as they
are very fierce and voracious, and in one case when a male
and female were placed in a jar filled with water, only one
day elapsed before the male was found dead and half devoured
by his disconsolate widow.
The EARWIG is placed in an order by itself, called Der-
LOCUST A.
They infest Africa and central Asia, but they annually make
incursions to Europe, where the damage they occasion is much
lessreparable than in their native lands, for there the power of
vegetation is so great that a few days repair the injuries caused
by them, but in Europe a whole year is required for that pur-
pose. The following account of these creatures is extracted
from Mr. Cummins's South Africa :
NATURAL HISTORY. 403
ing at them until the air was darkened with their masses,
while the plain on which we stood became densely covered with
them. Far as my eye could reach, east, west, north, and south,
they stretched in one unbroken cloud and more than an hour
;
dogs."
Our common grasshoppers belong to this order, but require
no description.
The Cockroach (Blatta orientalis), erroneously called by
"
housewives, the Black-beetle" (it not being a beetle at all, and
its colour being a reddish
brown), belongs to the family Blattidte.
It was originally brought from abroad, and has
completely
domesticated itself, just as the brown rat has done, so that few
houses are free from it.
THE MOLE-CRICKET.
The curious insect called the MOLE-CRICKET is not un-
common in England. It inhabits sandy banks, digging deep
holes, and forming chambers, in which the eggs are laid
494 NATURAL HISTORY.
Family, Achetidae. (Gr. 'A^'raf, a Cliirper, i.e. the Grasshopper.)
GRYLLOTALPA. (Lat. G-ryllus, a Cricket; talpa, a Mole.)
The fore legs closelyresemble those of the mole, and are used
for the same purpose. From its not unmusical cry it is called
in some parts of England .the Churr-worm, and near Oxford the
"
rustics call it Croaker."
its legs may be easily mistaken for dry twigs. Even the rami-
fied veinings of the leaf are preserved on its wings. It is singu-
lar that while some insects closely resemble vegetables, some
MYRMELEON.f
* I once
caught a dragon-fly in my net, and while holding it by the wings I pre-
sented to it no less than thirty-seven large flies in rapid succession, all of which it
devoured, together with four long-legged spiders. It would probably have eaten a
many more had not been tired of catching flies for it.
I
are the perfect insects, and have had wings, but have lost them
soon after their admission into their cell they also have eyes ;
;
pupa3, who resemble the workers, except that they possess the
rudiments of wings; and 5. the larvse, or workers. These do
all the icork, i. e.
they collect food, attend to the queen, and
watch over the eggs and young, and build and repair their cas-
tle. These are more numerous than all the other kinds.
On the approach of the rainy season, the pupae obtain wings
and issue forth in swarms. Few, however, survive. Myriads
are devoured by birds, reptiles, and even by man and many ;
are carried out to sea, and perish there. Those that do escape
408 NATURAL HISTORY.
are speedily found by the labourers, who enclose a pair in a clay
cell i'rom which they never emerge. The male soon dies,
but the female, after rapidly increasing to nearly three inches
in length and one in breadth, continues to lay eggs unceas-
ingly for a very long time. This cell becomes the nucleus
cf the hive, and round it all the other cells and galleries are
built.
These insects arc terribly destructive, as they eat through
wooden beams, furniture, &c., leaving only a thin shell, which
is broken down with the least extra weight, and many are
the occasions when an unsuspecting individual, on seating
himself on an apparently sound sofa or chair, finds himself,
like Belzoni in the Pyramid, reposing among a heap of dust
and splinters.
Mr. Gumming describes the habitations of the White Ant in
these terms :
"
Throughout the greater part of the plains frequented by
blesboks, numbers of the sunbaked hills or mounds of clay
formed by the white ants occur. The average height of the
ant-hills in these districts is from two to three feet. They
are generally distant from another from one to three hundred
yards, being more or less thickly placed in different parts.
These ant-hills are of the greatest service to the hunter, en-
abling him with facility to conceal himself on the otherwise
open plain."
THE CADDIS-FLY.
This fly is well known to every angler both in its larva
and in its perfect state. The larva is a soft white worm,
of which fishes are exceedingly fond, and it therefore requires
some means of defence. It accordingly actually makes for
itself a movable house of sand, small stones, straws, bits of
at the same time all enemies are kept out. AYhen the time
for its change has arrived, the pupa bites through the grating,
rises to the surface, and crawls out of the reach of the water,
which would soon be fatal to it. The skin then splits down
the back, and the perfect insect emerges.
The order is called Trichoptera, because the wings, instead
of being covered with scales as are those of butterflies, are
clothed with hairs. There are many species of Caddis-flies.
FORMICA.
sidious destroyers. I found them useful auxiliaries in dissection, as they had usual-
ly consumed all the fat, leaving the important organs ready cleared.
502 NATURAL HISTORY.
not last long, for when a female ant escapes, and founds an in-
fant colony, her wings are soon lost. Few do escape, as the birds
find these living clouds a most agreeable and plentiful repast.
Ants do not, as has been so frequently said, lay up stores of
corn for the winter, for they are in a state of torpidity, during
the cold months, and require no food. Moreover, an ant would
find as much difficulty in eating or digesting a grain of corn as
we should in devouring a truss of straw.
In each nest are three kinds of ants, males, females, and
neuters, or workers.
THE BE E.
APIS.
r.vPiLio.
Family, Sphingidse.
It is a very singular fact, that those who, living so much in the open fields, would
be supposed to have a correct knowledge of natural phenomena, are really profoundly
ignorant of facts that pass daily before their eyes. 1 have already mentioned the pop-
ular superstitions regarding ells.
510 NATURAL HISTORY.
AUCTIA.
\
\
-
T Jnve more than once seen a kitten rhasinjr a tiger-moth among the flowers in
a garden, evidently deceived by its resemblance to a mouse.
NATURAL HISTORY. 511
Family, Alucitidse.
ALUC1TA
moving, and then stretch out their body to the fullest extent,
as if measuring their distance. After these preliminaries,
they take a firm hold with the fore feet, and draw tho hinder
512 NATURAL HISTORY.
feet up to them, forming their body into an arch or loop.
When at rest, the caterpillars often deceive an observer by
their close resemblance to twigs, as they stretch themselves out
motionless from the branch.
The family is very large, and contains many interesting
species, but want of space compels
me
to omit all but the
insect represented above, the SWALLOW-TAILED MOTH. The
caterpillar ot this moth feeds principally on the elder, willow,
and lime, and the moth appears in June and July. It is one
of the largest of the British Geometridse, as the spread of the
wing considerably exceeds two inches. Its colour is a pale
yellow, and the lines across the wings are deep yellow. It
Order II.
DIPTRA.(G\\ A/f, twice; irrtpov, awing.)
Family, Culicidae. (Lat. Culex, a Gnat.)
CULEX.
.';*'
THE END.