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قراءة كتاب Birds and Nature Vol. 9 No. 4 [April 1901]

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‏اللغة: English
Birds and Nature Vol. 9 No. 4 [April 1901]

Birds and Nature Vol. 9 No. 4 [April 1901]

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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BIRDS AND NATURE.

ILLUSTRATED BY COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY.

Vol. IX. APRIL, 1901. No. 4

CONTENTS.

APRIL. 145
I come, like a hope to a gloomy breast 145
THE CURASSOW. 146
SOME NOTABLE NESTS. 149
THE BLACKBIRD’S SONG. 151
A GOLDEN EAGLE. 152
THE HARLEQUIN DUCK. (Histrionicus histrionicus.) 155
AN ORCHARD BIRD-WAY. 156
THE CANADA GROUSE. (Dendragapus canadensis.) 158
DO PLANTS HAVE INSTINCT. 162
Still winter holds the frozen ground and fast the streams with ice are bound 164
THE DOVEKIE. (Alle alle.) 167
As flying ever westward Night’s shadows swiftly glide 167
THE SONG SPARROW’S APPEAL. 168
THE WITCH IN THE CREAM. A TRUE STORY. 169
THE BEAVER. 170
PAU-PUK-KEEWIS AND THE BEAVERS. 174
What rosy pearls, bright zoned or striped! 175
SNAILS OF THE OCEAN. 176
THE LEMON. 182
TWO WRENS. 185
WHEN SPRING COMES. 188
CUBEBS. (Piper cubeba L.) 191
A TREE-TOP TOWN. 192

APRIL.

No days such honored days as these! While yet

Fair Aphrodite reigned, men seeking wide

For some fair thing which should forever bide

On earth, her beauteous memory to set

In fitting frame that no age could forget,

Her name in lovely April’s name did hide,

And leave it there, eternally allied

To all the fairest flowers Spring did beget.

And when fair Aphrodite passed from earth,

Her shrines forgotten and her feasts of mirth,

A holier symbol still in seal and sign,

Sweet April took, of kingdom most divine,

When Christ ascended, in the time of birth

Of spring anemones, in Palestine.

—Helen Hunt Jackson.


I come, like a hope to a gloomy breast,

With comforting smiles, and tears

Of sympathy for the earth’s unrest;

And news that the summer nears,

For the feet of the young year every day

Patter and patter and patter away.

I thrill the world with a strange delight;

The birds sing out with a will,

And the herb-lorn lea is swift bedight

With cowslip and daffodil;

While the rain for an hour or two every day

Patters and patters and patters away.

—Bernard Malcolm Ramsay, in the Pall Mall Magazine.


THE CURASSOW.

An interesting race of birds, known as the Curassows, has its range throughout that part of South America, east of the Andes Mountain range and north of Paraguay. All the species are confined to this region except one, which is found in Central America and Mexico. This is the bird of our illustration (Crax globicera).

The Curassows belong to the order of Gallinaceous birds and bear the same relation to South America that the pheasants and grouse bear to the Old World. They are in every respect the most important and the most perfect game birds of the district which they inhabit. In all there are twelve species placed under four genera. As the hind toes of the feet are placed on a level with the others they resemble the pigeon and are unlike many of the other gallinaceous birds.

The Curassows are very large and rather heavy birds and some of them are larger than our turkey. They have short wings and a strong bill. At the base of the upper mandible and on the upper side there is a large tubercle-like excrescence which is of a yellow color and quite hard. Upon the head there is a gracefully arched crest of feathers which is made of curled feathers, the tips of which are white in some of the species. This crest can be lowered or raised at the will of the bird. The plumage of the species

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