The Natural History of Ireland: Revised and enlarged by Howard SaundersReeve, Benham and Reeve, 1851 - Zoology |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 10
... pair of tame swans . On the 20th of February , a flock of twenty appeared flying above the bay in a southerly direction . Their call , on being first heard , was believed to be distant music ; -as they approached it was remarked to ...
... pair of tame swans . On the 20th of February , a flock of twenty appeared flying above the bay in a southerly direction . Their call , on being first heard , was believed to be distant music ; -as they approached it was remarked to ...
Page 19
... pair of tame swans , but they would not keep company with it . That the stranger might have the advantage of some society , it was considerately placed with a flock of common geese , which welcomed it as a friend , and thenceforth they ...
... pair of tame swans , but they would not keep company with it . That the stranger might have the advantage of some society , it was considerately placed with a flock of common geese , which welcomed it as a friend , and thenceforth they ...
Page 20
... pair of Polish swans ( Cyg . immutabilis ) , a male black swan , and several kinds of geese , with all of which it seems to live quietly and contentedly , though not so fami- liar with visitors as the others . The black swan coupled ...
... pair of Polish swans ( Cyg . immutabilis ) , a male black swan , and several kinds of geese , with all of which it seems to live quietly and contentedly , though not so fami- liar with visitors as the others . The black swan coupled ...
Page 21
... pair of these birds.t THE TAME OR MUTE SWAN , Cygnus olor , Gmelin ( sp . ) , is not known to have occurred in a wild state in Ireland , though it is believed to have occasionally wandered to Great Britain , from its native abode in ...
... pair of these birds.t THE TAME OR MUTE SWAN , Cygnus olor , Gmelin ( sp . ) , is not known to have occurred in a wild state in Ireland , though it is believed to have occasionally wandered to Great Britain , from its native abode in ...
Page 23
... pair of old swans at the Falls . They were seated in the furrow of a potato - field , busily engaged delving their bills into the sides of the ridges where potatoes were exposed to view , bringing them out and eating them . It is a ...
... pair of old swans at the Falls . They were seated in the furrow of a potato - field , busily engaged delving their bills into the sides of the ridges where potatoes were exposed to view , bringing them out and eating them . It is a ...
Common terms and phrases
adult bird adult male appeared April arctic arctic terns August autumn bean goose Belfast Bay bill black-backed bred breeding breeding-haunt brent geese brent goose cliffs coast colour common common tern Cork cormorant diving Dublin eggs feathers February feeding female fish flight flock flying frequently gannet goose grebe grey lag guillemot gull harbour head herring-gull hirundo immature inches informed Ireland island islet January Jardine June Kerry killed kittiwake lake Larne Lough Larus latter lesser black-backed gull Linn locality Lough Neagh March mentioned miles month nests nidify noticed observed obtained occasionally pair petrels plumage pochards procured puffin R. J. Montgomery razorbill remarked river Lagan rocks roseate scaup Scotland season seen Selby shooter shore shot skua species specimen stomach Strangford Lough summer teal terns toe and nail tufted ducks visited Wexford wigeon wild ducks wild-fowl wing winter yards Yarrell young birds
Popular passages
Page 351 - Moor, moor the barge, ye gallant crew ! And, gentle ladye, deign to stay ! Rest thee in Castle Ravensheuch, Nor tempt the stormy firth to-day. " The blackening wave is edged with white : To inch* and rock the sea-mews fly; The fishers have heard the Water-Sprite, Whose screams forebode that wreck is nigh.
Page 9 - Beautiful bird ! thou voyagest to thine home, Where thy sweet mate will twine her downy neck With thine, and welcome thy return with eyes Bright in the lustre of their own fond joy.
Page 198 - ... inches from the tip of the beak to the end of the tail when spread as far as possible flat.
Page 221 - They are so numerous that we have frequently seen an uninterrupted line of them extending full half way over the bay, or to a distance of more than three miles, and so close together that thirty have fallen at one shot. This living column, on an average, might have been about six yards broad, and as many deep ; so that, allowing sixteen birds to a cubic yard, there must have been nearly four millions of birds on the wing at one time.
Page 234 - I observed with concern the extraordinary affection manifested by these birds towards each other ; for, whenever one fell dead or wounded on the water, its mate or a stranger immediately alighted by its side, swam round it, pushed it with its bill as if to urge it to fly or dive, and seldom would leave it until an oar was raised to knock it on the head, when at last, aware of the danger, it would plunge below in an instant.
Page 220 - Hill, from the myriads of small birds of that name which frequent its base, and appear to prefer its environs to every other part of the harbour. " They are so numerous that we have frequently seen an uninterrupted line of them extending full half way over the bay, or to a distance of more than three miles, and so close together that thirty have fallen at one shot.
Page 351 - The search after food, as we agreed on a former occasion, is the principal cause why animals change their places. The different tribes of the wading birds always migrate when rain is about to take place...
Page 234 - July, the old ones show vast affection towards them, and seem totally insensible of danger in the breeding season. If a parent is taken at that time, and suspended by the wings, it will, in a sort of despair, treat itself most cruelly, by biting every part it can reach ; and the moment it is loosed, will never offer to escape, but instantly resort to its unfledged young...
Page 261 - Here the ganet soares high into the sky to espy his prey in the sea under him, at which he casts himself headlong into the sea, and swallows up whole herrings in a morsell. This bird flys through the ship's sailes, piercing them with his beak.
Page 370 - ... by night, and with a candle light kill abundance of them. Here are severall wells and pooles, yet in extraordinary dry weather, people must turn their cattell out of the islands, and the corn failes.