Our Summer Migrants: An Account of the Migratory Birds which Pass the Summer in the British IslandsBickers, 1877 - 336 páginas |
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Página 2
... less shy in their habits , and will suffer a much nearer approach . The name Wheatear may have been derived either from the season of its arrival , or from its being taken in great numbers for the table at wheat harvest . Or , again ...
... less shy in their habits , and will suffer a much nearer approach . The name Wheatear may have been derived either from the season of its arrival , or from its being taken in great numbers for the table at wheat harvest . Or , again ...
Página 6
... less numerous at the same season , and the practice of snaring them has perceptibly de- clined . It was remarkable that , although in the height of the season - i . e . , at wheat harvest -so many hundreds of dozens were taken , yet ...
... less numerous at the same season , and the practice of snaring them has perceptibly de- clined . It was remarkable that , although in the height of the season - i . e . , at wheat harvest -so many hundreds of dozens were taken , yet ...
Página 9
... less diffused than that species . September it has again left the By the end of country , and I On have never met with an instance of its remain- ing in England during the winter months . several occasions correspondents have forwarded ...
... less diffused than that species . September it has again left the By the end of country , and I On have never met with an instance of its remain- ing in England during the winter months . several occasions correspondents have forwarded ...
Página 10
... a little remarkable that in Ireland the Whinchat is far less common than the Stone- chat , the reverse being the case in England . Mr. Thompson says , in the work already quoted ( ΙΟ OUR SUMMER MIGRANTS . The Stonechat.
... a little remarkable that in Ireland the Whinchat is far less common than the Stone- chat , the reverse being the case in England . Mr. Thompson says , in the work already quoted ( ΙΟ OUR SUMMER MIGRANTS . The Stonechat.
Página 15
... less vivid than in summer . Here again , as with the Wheatear , the change of plumage seems to be effected by a change of colour in the same feathers , and not by a moult . Apropos of this subject , the reader may be referred to an ...
... less vivid than in summer . Here again , as with the Wheatear , the change of plumage seems to be effected by a change of colour in the same feathers , and not by a moult . Apropos of this subject , the reader may be referred to an ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Our Summer Migrants: An Account of the Migratory Birds which Pass the Summer ... James Edmund Harting Visualização integral - 1875 |
Our Summer Migrants: An Account of the Migratory Birds which Pass the Summer ... James Edmund Harting Visualização integral - 1875 |
Our Summer Migrants: An Account of the Migratory Birds which Pass the Summer ... James Edmund Harting Visualização integral - 1889 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
amongst Anthus appearance April arrival Blackcap Blyth breed British Birds British Islands Canon Tristram Chiff-chaff claw coast colour common Corncrake Cuckoo edition eggs Egypt England Europe feathers frequently Garden Warbler Gibraltar Grasshopper Warbler habits hatched haunts Hist hole Hoopoe Howard Saunders hybernation Ibis India insects instance Ireland June Landrail Lapland Lesser Whitethroat Lord Lilford male Malta Meadow Pipit Mediterranean migration month naturalists neighbourhood Nightingale Nightjar Norfolk North Africa noticed observed occasionally occurrence Orioles Ornithology Palestine plumage procured Professor Newton rare Red-backed Shrike Redstart Reed Warbler Reed Wren's remarked Rock Pipit Salvin Sand Martin says Scotland season Sedge Warbler seen September Shetland shot song southward species specimens Spotted Flycatcher spring and autumn summer migrants Sussex Swallow Swift tail throughout tion Titlark's nest Tree Pipit Wagtail Wheatear Whinchat Whitethroat Willow Wren wind wing Wood Wryneck Yarrell Yellow Wagtail young Cuckoo Zoologist
Passagens conhecidas
Página 38 - Every thing did banish moan, Save the nightingale alone : She, poor bird, as all forlorn, Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn, And there sung the dolefull'st ditty, That to hear it was great pity : 'Fie, fie, fie...
Página 334 - I do not know in what district of England Turner first or % 3g. IK peculiar manifestalongest studied, but the scenery whose influence I can trace most i»n in Turner, definitely throughout his works, varied as they are, is that of Yorkshire. Of all his drawings, I think, those of the Yorkshire series have the most heart in them, the most affectionate, simple, unwearied, serious finishing of truth. There is in them little seeking after effect, but a strong love of place; little exhibition of the artist's...
Página 337 - This splendid edition of Shakespeare's Works is copyright, having been carefully revised and amplified by Mr. and Mrs. Cowden Clarke. The Text is selected with great care, and is printed from a new fount of ancient...
Página 235 - ... the Pipit from its back on to the edge. It then stood quite upright on its legs, which were straddled wide apart, with the claws firmly fixed half-way down the inside of the nest among the interlacing fibres of which the nest was woven; and, stretching its wings apart and backwards, it elbowed the pipit fairly over the margin so far that its struggles took it down the bank instead of back into the nest.
Página 229 - ... its load with a jerk, and quite disengaged it from the nest. It remained in this situation a short time, feeling about with the extremities of its wings, as if to be convinced whether the business was properly executed, and then dropped into the nest again.
Página 229 - ... of the nest till it reached the top, where, resting for a moment, it threw off its load with a jerk, and quite disengaged it from the nest.
Página 334 - Ita peculiar . , ... , , . . manifestation in of the Yorkshire series have the most heart in them, the most affectionate, simple, unwearied, serious finishing of truth. There is in them little seeking after effect, but a strong love of place, little...
Página 236 - Pipits had welldeveloped quills on the wings and back, and had bright eyes, partially open ; yet they seemed quite helpless under the manipulations of the Cuckoo, which looked a much less developed creature. The Cuckoo's legs, however, seemed very muscular ; and it appeared to feel about with its wings, which were absolutely featherless, as with hands, the ' spurious wing' (unusually large in proportion), looking like a spread-out thumb.
Página 337 - Text, with Life and excellent Glossary, arranged on the Plan of a Concordance, giving not only the meanings of doubtful words, but also a complete Index to all the passages in which they are to be found. In I vol. royal 8vo, with very clear type on toned paper. Portrait after Droeshout, bound in gilt cloth, 12J.
Página 237 - ... spurious wing' (unusually large in proportion) looking like a spread-out thumb. The most singular thing of all was the direct purpose with which the blind little monster made for the open side of the nest, the only part where it could throw its burthen down the bank. I think all the spectators felt the sort of horror and awe at the apparent inadequacy of the creature's intelligence to its acts that one might have felt at seeing a toothless hag raise a ghost by an incantation. It was horribly...