!, ;i (MMMMMMIMIM WW III | »I M i »i | | I M I | | l l t|i i>t ii |iWM IW I il l imiyill,W iiiiilpii i iiii wmmimmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmi^mmmmmmmmmmn Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924006485530 Cornell University Library GR 735.S97 The folk lore and provincial names of Br 3 1924 006 485 530 > t ^oll'^QXt c^0rietg, FOR COLLECTING AND PRINTING RELICS OF POPULAR ANTIQUITIES, &c. ESTABLISHED IN THE YEAR MDCCCLXXVIII. PUBLICATIONS OF THE FOLK-LORE SOCIETY. XVII. (1885.) '§tmhmi : THE EIGHT HON. THE VISCOUNT ENFIELD. Andrew Lang, M.A. ] W. K. S. Kalston, M.A. Edward B. Ttloe, LL.D., F.R.S. '§mciax : G. L. GOMMB, F.S.A., 2, Park Villas, Lonsdale Road, Barnes, S.W. §0Kttx:iI : The Earl Bbauchamp. Edward Brabrook, F.S.A. Edward Clodd. G. L. GoMME, F.S.a: A. Granger Hutt, F.S.A. J. T. Micklbthwaitb, F.S.A. Rev. Rd. Morris, M.A., LL.D. Alfred Nutt. Edward Peacock, F.S.A. Professor A. H. Saycb. Captain R. C. Temple. Henry B. Whbatley, F.S.A. Ireland: G. H. Kinahan, M.R.I.A. Sovth Scotland: William George Black, Esq. Worth Scotland : Rev. Walter Gregor. India: Captain R. C. Temple. China : J. Stewart Lockhart, Esq. "^mauT^ §^tcntKxm'. A. Granger Hutt, F.S.A., 8, Oxford Road, Kilburn, N.W. J. J. Foster, 36, Alma Square, St. John's Wood, N.W. '$an, Wxtmmcx : Edward Clodd, 19, Carleton Road, Tufnell Park, N. THE FOLK LOEE PROYINCIAL NAMES BRITISH BIRDS BY THE EEV. CHARLES ^WAINSON, M.A., Bectob of Old Ghablton ; Author of "A Handbook of Weather Folk lore." LONDON : ^fttllia'&eU for tje JFoIfe aore Society tg ELLIOT STOCK, 62, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1886. /i '2.Sr^f^ JELL UNIVERSITY \ LIBRARY Printed by Hazell, WatBOn, & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury. PEEFAGE. TN submitting this work to the members of the Folk -■- Lore Society, and to the public, my object has been to gather from various quarters the provincial names of our wild British birds (all notices of domesticated species, being omitted),, as well as the popular sayings and super- stitions attached to them, illustrating these, if possible, by references to similar beliefs prevalent among other nations. I have endeavoured to model it, however imperfectly, on the invaluable volumes of M. EoUand, " La Faune Populaire de la France," following the classification^ and adopting the nomenclature, used in the "List of British Birds compiled by a Committee of the British Ornitho- logists' Union. London, 1883." I must express my most sincere thanks to Mr. J. A. Harvie Brown for the help he so kindly afforded in allow- ing me to make use of his MS. list of the provincial names of Scotch birds, also for many useful suggestions and corrections ; and to Mr. Gomme for the courtesy and consideration he has shown in many ways, especially in his revision of the proofs. I may add that the completion of the work has been unavoidably delayed from several causes, one of which has been my own ill-health. CHAELES 8WAINS0N. The Rectory, Old Ohakltok. BOOKS OF EEFEEBNCE. Akerman (J. Y.), F.S.A. — Glossary of Provincial Words and Phrases in use in Wiltshire. Lond., 1848, Aneaii — Description Philosophale de la Nature. Paris, 1571. Aubrey (John), F.K.S. — Miscellanies. Lond., 1847. . Eemaines of Gentilisme and Judaisme ; edited by James Britten (Published for the Folk Lore Society). 1881. Baker (Miss A. E.) — Northamptonshire Glossary. Lond., 1854. Baring- Gould (Eev. S.)— Lives of the Saints. Lond., 1872-77. Curious Myths of the Middle Ages. Lond., 1866-68. — '■ Legends of Old Testament Characters. Loud., 1871. Iceland, its Scenes and Sagas. Lond., 1863. Bermqk (Thos.)— History of British Birds. Newcastle, 1797—1804. Bowden (Eev. J.) — Naturalist in Norway. Lond., 1869. Brand (Eev. J.)— Popular Antiquities (Bohn's edition). Lond., 1853. British Birds, A List of : compiled by Committee of British Ornitholo- gists' Union. Lond., 1883. Broderip (W. J.), F.E.S. — Zoological Eecreations. Lond., 1849. Browne (Sir Thos.)— Works (edit. S. Wilkius). Lond., 1835. Burne (Miss C. S.)— Shropshire Folk Lore. Lond., 1883-85. Bngch (M.) — Deutscher Volksaberglaube. Leipzig, 1877. Camden (W.) — Britannia (trans, by Holland). Lond., 1610. Camphell (J. F.) — Popular Tales of the West Highlands. Edinburgh, 1860-62. Caa-ew (E.) — Survey of Cornwall (edit. Lord de Dunstanville). Lond., 1811. Chambers (E.) — Popular Ehymes of Scotland. Edinburgh, 1870. Chaucer (Geoffrey) — Poetical Works (Bohn's edition). Loud., 1880. Chester (E.) — Love's Martyr (Edit. Grosart : New Shakspere Society). Clare (John) — Poems. Lond., 1820. • Village Minstrel and other Poems. 1821. Cox (Eev. Sir George)— Mythology of the Aryan Nations. Lond., 1878. Baient (G. W.)— Popular Tales from the Norse. Edinburgh, 1859. VI BOOKS OF EEFERENCE. De Nore {i.e. M. Da Chesnel) — Dictionnaire des Superstitions (Librairie Migne). Paris, 1856. Benham (M. A.)— A Collection of Proverbs and Popular Sayings (Printed for tbe Percy Society). Lond., 1846. Drayton (M.) — Works. Lond. , 1753. Du Bartas (Guillaume de Saluste).— Divine Weekes and Wordes (trans. by Joshua Sylvester). 1633. Dyer (Eev. T. F. T.)— Folk Lore of Shakespeare. Lond., 1883. Farrer (J. A.) — Primitive Manners and Customs. Lond., 1879. JFolh Lnre Society, Publications of. Fuller (J.)— Worthies of England (edit. Nicholls). Lond., 1811. Gesneri (Conr.) — Historia Animalium. Frankfurt, 1620. Grimm (J.) — German Mythology (trans, by Stallybrass). Lond., 1880-83. Grohmann (Dr. J. V.) — Aberglauben und Gebrauche aus Bbhmen und Mahren. Leipzig, 1864. Gubernatis (A.) — Zoological Mythology. Lond., 1872. iTaZZJroeZZ (J. 0.), F.E.S. — Nursery Ehymes of England. Lond.,™.(f. Popular Ehymes and Nursery Tales. Lond., 1849. Glossary of Archaic and Provincial Words. Lond., 1860. Harleian Miscellany — Lond., 1808. Earting (J. E.) — Ornithology of Shakespeare. Lond., 1871. Henderson (W.) — Folk Lore of the Northern Counties. Lond., 1879. SoUnshed — Chronicles of England. (1577) 1S07. Hoiighton (Eev. W.)— Gleanings from the Natural History of the Ancients. Lond., 1879. Hunt (Eobt.) F.E.S.— Popular Eomances of the West of England. Lond., 1865. Irijih Folk Lore (by Lageniensis) — Glasgow, n.d. (? 1870), Jacltson (Miss G. F.) — Shropshire Word Book. Lond., 1879-81. Jamieson (Dr.) — Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language. Edinburgh, 1808. Jamieson (Mrs.) — Legends of the Monastic Orders. Lond., 1863. Jones (W.), F.S.A. — Credulities Past and Present. Lond., 1880. Johiis (Eev. C. A.) — British Birds in their Haunts. Lond., 1876. Jonson (Ben) — Works. Notes by GifEord (edit. Cunningham), n.d. Jonston (J.) — History of the Wonderful Things of Nature. Lond., 1657. Kelby (W. K.) — Curiosities of Indo-European Tradition and Folk Lore. Lond., 1863. Krohnns (Dr.) — Staroceske povesti, etc. 1845-51. Laisnel de la Salle — Croyances et Ligendes de la Centre de la France. Paris, 1875. BOOKS OF REFERENCE. Vll Lenprechting (Baron Karl von) — Aus dem Lechrain. Munich, 1855. LoTig Ago (Ratcliffie). iMbhoch (Rev. R)— Fauna of Norfolk. Norwich, 1879. MacGfillwray — History of British Land and Water Birds. 1837-52. Magni (Olai) — Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus. Eomae, 1655. Melusine — Paris, 1882. Monnier et Vingtrinier — Traditions Populaires Compar^es. Paris, 1854. Montagu (Gr.) — Dictionary of British Birds. Lond., 1866. Montanus — Die Deutsohen VolkafeBte. 1854-58. Monis (Bev. F. 0.) — History of British Birds. n,.d. Mudie (Eoht.)— British Birds. Lond., 1835. Muffett (T.) — Health's Improvement. Lond., 1655. Notes and Queries — 1850-83. Permant (T.)— British Zoology. Lend., 1812. Phipson (E.) — Animal Lore of Shakespeare's Time. Lond., 1883. Malston (W. E. S.)— Russian Folk Tales. Lond., 1873. Songs of the Russian People. Lond., 1872. Holland (E.) — Fauna Populaire de la France (Tome IL, Les oiseaux sauvages). Paris, 1879. Sehillot (P.) — Traditions et Superstitions de la Haute Bretagne. Paris, 1882. Shaliespeare (W.) — The Plays of (edit, by Howard Staunton). Lond., 1858. Sikes (Wert)— British Goblins. Lond., 1880. Sim/rock (K.) — Haudbuch der Deutsohen Mythologie. Bonn, 1878. Sheat (Rev. Professor) — Concise Etymological Dictionary. Oxford, 1882. Souvestre (B.) — Le Foyer Breton. Paris, 1874. Spenser (E.)— The Works of. Lond., 1856. Sternberg (T.) — Dialect and JFolk Lore of Northamptonshire. Lond., 1851. Stevenson iH.)— Birds of Norfolk. 1866. Swainson (Rev. C.) Handbook of Weather Folk Lore. Edinburgh, 1874. Swan (J.) — Speculum Mundi. Cambridge, 1643. Taylor (J.)— Works (edit. Hindley). 1872. Thompson (W.) — Natural History of the Birds, Fishes, etc., of Ireland. Lond., 1849-55. Thorpe (B.j — ^Northern Mythology. Lond., 1851. Walters (John J.) — Natural History of the Birds of Ireland. Dublin, 1853. Willoughhy (F.)— Ornithology. Lond,, 1678. VIU nOOKS OF REFBEENCE. Wolf (J. "W.)— Beitiage zur Deutschen Mythologie. Gottingen and Leipzig, 1852. Wood (Kev. J. G.)— lUiistTated Natural History. Lond., 1865. WnWhe (Dr. A.) — Der Deutsche Volksaberglaube der Gegenwart. Berlin, 1879. Ywrrell (W.)— History of British Birds. Lond., 1856. Zeitgehrift fiir Deutsche Mythologie. Gottingen, 1853-59. Zingerle (Ign. von)— ;Sitten, Brauche und Meinungen des Tiroler Volkes. Innsbruck, 1871. Zoologist, The. THE FOLK LORE AND PROVINCIAL NAMES; OF BRITISH BIRDS. Order Passeees. Sub-Order Oscines. Section Oscines Dentieostres. Family TuEDiDiE. Sub-family Tuedin^. Genus Turdus. MISSEL THRUSH {Turdus visoivorus). , Thrush : A.-S. Thrysae ; akia to 0. H. G-. Droscot, hence Gar. Drossel. 1. From the fondness of this bird for the berries of the mistletoe, holly, and holm, it is called Missel thrush (general). Muzzel thrush (Roxburgh). Cf. Grive du gui (France) ; Misteldrossel (Germany) ; Yiscado (Italian Switzerland). , . Holm thrush, Holm cock, Holm screech (Cornwall, Devon, Dorset). Mizzly Dick (Northumberland). 2. The harsh note it utters when alarmed has caused it to receive the names of Screech (general). .. ) ^ Sldrleock (Derbyshire). ^ , , strike or Skrite (South generally). ', , Squawking thrush (Isle of Wight). . Jercock, or Ghercock (Westmoreland). 2 tKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BBITISH BIRDS. Horse thrush (Nortl^ants). Grawthrnsh (ditto). Jay (North of Ireland). Jay pie (WUts). 3. In Scotland and Ireland the names of the missel thrush and fieldfare [Turdus pilaris) are often interchangeable, hence we find the former known by the titles of Big felt (Ireland). Feltie, or Feltiflyer (Berwick ; Stirling). The same confusion prevq-ils in East Anglia, where we meet with the names Fulfer (Norfolk). Felfit (East Suffolk). 4. The Missel thrush is also called ' ■ Stormcock (general) From its habit of singing through gales of wind and storms of rain. Throstle cock (Roxburgh). Thrice {i.e. Thrush) cock (Midlands ; Salop). Big mavis (East Lothian). Cf. Grosse grive (France). Bull thrush (Hants) The last two names given from its large size. Wood thrush (Dumfries). Norman thrush (Craven). Stone thrush (Dorset). • Marble thrush (Northants). The last two froiji the round, marble-like spots on its breast. Cf. French terro Grievere — i.e. speckled, spotted like a thrush {grive). Sycock (Derbyshire). Bunting thi-ush. , Fen thrush (Northants). Butcher bird (Donegal). Crakle. Corney Keevor (Antrim). HUlan (? Highland) piet (Aberdeen). The Welsh caU it, according to Pennant, Pen y llwyn, i.e. Master or Head of the coppice, for it will not suffer any bird to approach its haunts during the season of incubation. - 5. Bewick mentions a superstition that mistletoe was only propagated by the seed which passed the- digestive organs of this bird ; hence the proverb, " Turdus malum sibi cacat." In some parts of France (vid. BoUand, p. 241), the missel thrush is believed to be able to speak seven languages. PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BBITISH BIEDS. - 3 SONG THRUSH {Turdus musious). 1. From A.-S. Tfirj/see (see preceding) are derived :— Thrush. Thrusher (Berks and Bucks). Dirsh (Somerset); Thrushfield (Salop). 2. From A.-S. Throstle. • Throstle (North ; Midlands ; Ireland). • Thrushel or Thrustle (Salop). Thirstle (Devon ; Cornwall ; Salop). 3. Various names. Grey bird (Sussex ; Devon ; Cornwall). Whistling thrush or Whistling Dick (Thames Valley). Mavis (East Anglia; Ireland; Scotland). Cf. Ma/u/ois (France) ; Malvis (Spain). This term seems to be applied by old writers to the Missel thrush and Throstle alike. Thus we find in Spenser : — " The thrush replyes ; the Biavis- descant playes " {Mpithalam., 1. 81), where the letter bird is evidently the throstle ; the word " descant " (i.e. the altering the movement of an air by additional notes and ornaments) being an exact description of this bird's song. But, on the other hand, Skelton, in his poem " Philip Sparrow," writes : — • ' ' " The threstill with her warblynge, The mavis with her whistell." Here the throstle's sweet music is contrasted with the clear shrill cry of the missel thrush. 4. Attempts have been made— =-with what success I leave the reader to judge' — to put the thrush's song into words. One is by MacgUlivray, quoted by Harting (" Ornithology of Shakespeare," p. 138) :— " Dear, dear, dear 'Is the rocky glen : / Far away, far away, far away The haunts of men. Here shall we dwell in love With the lark and the dove Cuckoo and com rail. Feast on the banded snail 4 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Woiin and gilded fly ; Drink of the crystal rill Windingf adown the hill, NeTer to dry. With glee, with glee, with glee, Cheer up, cheer up, cheer up, here. Nothing to harm ua, then sing merrily, Sing to the loTed ones whose nest is near. Qui, qui, qui, kweeu, quip, Tiurru, tiurru, chipiwi. Too-tee, too-tee, chiu choo, Chirri, chirri, chooee, Quiu, qui, qui." Mr. Hartipg remarks that "the first four lines, lines 7, 13 and 14,, and the last five lines in particular, approach remarkably close in sound to the original; and this is' rendered the more apparent if we endeavour to pro- nounce the words by whistling." , Another, from Land, and Water, Sept. 18th, 1875, given by Mr. Frank Buokland, is of a different character : — " Knee deep, knee deep, knee deep, Cherry du, cherry dii, cherry du, cherry : White hat, white hat ; Pretty Joey, pretty Joey, pretty Joey." A third is from Chambers' " Popular Rhymes of Scotland," pp. 197, 198. " In the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, it is tol& that a certain .drouthy carle, called Gilbert Doak, was one fine spring i morning going home not quite sober, when to his amazement he heard a mavis saluting him with — " Gibbie Doak, Gibbie Doak, where hast tu been, where hast tu been ? I hae been at the kirk, priein, priein, priein ! " "At the kirk priein " is a very different thing in Scotland from "at the kirk praying " (to prie meaning to taste). Gilbert had been sacrificing to Bacchus with some drouthy neighbours at the clachan, or village where the parish church is situated. 5. Folk lore. , It is stated in " Science Gossip," iii.'I41, that it is a common superstition that thrushes acquire new legs and cast the old ones, when about ten years old. According to Jonston (" Wonderful Things of Nature," p. 192), they are deaf. REDWING {Turdws iliacus). 1. So called from the reddish-orange colour of the body under the wings and under wing coverts ; whence also Redwing thrush. Red thrush (Midlands). Of. Twdu russu (Sicily), Rothdrossel (G-ermany). Redwing mavis (Forfar). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 2. The following seem to be akin to the German Wein- drossel : — (Cf. the Alsatian title, Gi-ive de Vendaiige.) Wind thrush (Somerset). Swine pipe. Winnard (Cornwall). Windle (Devon). 3. Various names. Felt (Northants). See " Fieldfare " (Turdus pilaris). Little feltjrfare (East Lothian). Pop. 4. Flight of the redwing. " A rushing, rustling sound is heard in the English Channel on the dark still nights of winter, and is called the ' herring spear,' or ' herring piece,' by the fishermen of Dover and Folkestone. This is caused by the flight of those pretty little birds the redwings, as they cross the Channel on their way to warmer regions. The fishermen listen to the sound with awe, yet regard it, on the whole, as an omen of good success with their nets." — Henderson's " Folk-lore of the Northern Counties," pp. 99-100 ; quoting Dr. Buckland's " Curiosities of Natural History," Ser. II., 285-6. (See Curlew.) "EIELSSASiE, {Twrdus pilaris). A.-S. Feldefare — i.e. field traveller. 1. Other forms. Feltyfare or Feldefare (Midlands ; Ireland). Fildifire (Salop). Feltiflier (Scotland). Felfer (Craven ; Lancashire). Felfaw (North Riding). Velverd (Wilts^. Felfit. Felt or Cock felt (Northants). 2. From the predominant bluish tinge of its upper plumage are derived : — Blue tail (Midlands ; West Ridingl Blue bird (Devon ; West Cornwall). Blue back (Lancashire ; Salop). Blue, or Big, felt (Ireland). Pigeon felt (Berks ; Bucks ; Oxon). Grey thrush (Scotland). 6 PEOVINCIAt NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 3. Called from its harsh cry before rain ■.-^— Storm bird (Norfolk). Storm cock (Salop ; Scotland). Screech bfrd ; Screech thrush (Stirling). Shred cock (Salop). 4. Various names : — ' Snow bird (Salop). Because it assembles in large flocks before a hcayy fall of snow. ' Jack bird. ' From its cry. Of. CJicurli cJuwJi (Luxemburg), Claque (Normandy). Monthly bird. — ? Mountain bird (Forfar). HUl bird (Scotland). Cf. Tourdon montagne (Nice). Redshank. " It has been supposed," says Jamieson (under Feltifare), "that from the; name Redshank, S. Redeschanke, probably originated the nursery story of the fieldfare bumiag its feet, when it wished to domesticate with men, like ' the Robin Redbreast." — See Gloss, to " Complaynt of Scotland," p. 365. BLACKBIRD {Tv/rdus merula). 1. From its colour it also receives the names of — Black uzzle, i.e. ousel (Craven). "Alas, a black ouzel. Cousin Shallow," 2 King Henry IV., Act iii., Sc. 2. where the expression seems to be equivalent to " a black sheep." Blackie (North Riding ; Scotland). 2. Also called Ousel, or Ousel cock. " The ousel cook, so black of hue. With orange tawny bill." Midsuimner's Night's Dream, iii. 1. . Garden ousel. Ousel = A.-S. Osle, akin to. Amsel {i.q. German term Amsd). Woofell. By this title {i.q. ousel) Drayton alludes to the blackbird in his- " Polyolbion "— " The woofell near at hand that hath a ^Iden biU." Merle (Ireland, Scotland). From Lat. nierula. So Merle (France), Merlo (Italy), Mirla (Spain), Merel (Holland), Amwrl (Austria). ' PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. "7 3. Folklore. ' " When the blackbird sings before Ohristmas, slie will cry before Candle- mas." (Meath.) It is also believed in Ireland that, when the blackbird sings loud and shrill, rain is sure to follow. In the neighbourhood of Brescia the last two days of January and the first of February are called " I giorni della merla,," the blackbird's days : , and the story is that this bird, whose original colour was white, became black because one year these three days were so cold that she had to take refuge in a chimney. . . Another reason- for the colour of the blackbird is given in a, French folk tale from the Ain (KoUaud, p. 250), which runs as follows : — _ " One day, while lurking in a thicket, .the blackbird, who was in those times as white as snow, saw to his great astonishment the magpie very busy hiding- in the hole of a tree diamonds, jewels, and pieces of golden coin. He showed himself to her, and inquired the means by Which he too might acquire a similar treasure. The magpie, not daring to withhold the informa- tion from a bird who had discovered her secret, replied, ' You must seek out in the bowels of the earth the palace of the Prince of Riches, offer him your services, and he vrill allow you to carry off as much treasure as your beak will hold. You will have to pass through many caverns, each one more abounding in riches than the last ; but you.must most particularly remember not to touch a single thing until you have actually seen the Prince himself.' '■The blackbird, on hearing this, repaired to the spot indicated by the magpie, where he found the entrance to a subterranean passage, into which he ventured. In time he reached a cavern, the walls of which were bright with silver ; but mindful of the magpie's advice, he continued to pursue his way till he entered a second .cavern, all ablaze with gold. This proved too much for him, and he plunged his beak greedily into the glittering dust with which the floor was strewed. Immediately there appeared a terrible demon, vomiting fire and smoke, who rushed upon the wretched bird with such lightning speed, that he escaped with the greatest difficulty. But, alas ! the thick smoke had besmirched for ever his white feathers, and he became, as he is now, quite black, with the exception of his beak,, which stUl preserves the colour of the gold he was so . anxious, to carry off. So it is that when the blaclsbird is surprised, he utters piercing cries of terror, as if he expected to be attacked by another monster." In some parts of Germany, according to Montanus (" Die Deutschen Volksfeste," p. 177), the blackbird is called Gottling or " little god," and is supposed t6 be a protection against lightning if kept caged in a house. There is a curious article of belief in the Sunnah, " that the souls of those in purgatory were in the crops of blackbirds, exposed to hell fire morning and evening until the Judgment Day." S. Kevin and the Blackbird. — It is related of S. Kevin that once, whilst praying i in the Temple of the Eock at Glendalough, with one hand out- stretched, a blackbird descended and dropped her eggs in the palm. The compassionate saint never removed his hand until the eggs were hatched ! The blackbird, as a Jacobite symbol, occurs in an old Scotch song, the first two verses of which are as follows :— " Upon a fair morning for soft recreation I heard a fair lady was making her moan. With signing and sobbing and sad lamentation. Saying, ' My blackbird most royal is flown. My thoughts they deceive me, Eeflections do grieve me. 8 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. And I am o'erburdened with sad miseiy. Yet if death should blind me, As true love inclines me, My blackbird I'lt seek out wherever he be. ' Once in fair England my blackbird did flourish, Se was the chief blackbird that in it did spring, ' Prime ladies of honour his person did nourish, Because he was the true son of a king. > ■ , But since that false fortune Which still is uncertain. Has caused this parting between him and me, His name I'll advance In Spain and in France, And I'll seek out my blackbird wherever he be." Probably the allusion is to Charles II., called " black boy " when young, from his swarthy complexion. (See Ellis, " Grig. Letters," 3rd Ser.,iii. 307.) RING OUZEL yTUrdus torquatus). 1. So called from the white gorget on the bird's breast, which resembles a necklace, hence the French Blanc collet, and the names — King blackbird. King thrush. 2. Names given to it from the nature of its favourite haunts. Moor, or mountain blackbird (North Riding ; Scotland). Heath throstle. Tor ouzel (Devon). Kock, or crag ouzel (Craven). Rock blackbird (Stirling). i HUl chack (Orkney Isles). I Rock starling (Roxburgh). Mountain ouzel.. Mountain thrash (Kirkcudbright). Mountain coUey (Somerset). Cf. Blanc collet (see above). 3. Also called Blackbird (Salop). Michaelmas blackbird (Dorset). Because it appears at Portland in large flocks in its autumnal and SDrinw flights. ^ " Round-berry bird (Connemara). From its fondness for the hemes of the rowan or mountain ash. Ditch blackie (East Lothian). Cowboy (Tipperary). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 9 Whistler (Wicklow). These two names from the loud clear whistle the bird utters after singing. Kitterchack (Orkney Isles). " So called from a belief that it the bird is seen near a house it betokens the speedy death of one of the occupants, or else that the family will soon ' flit ' to some other locality."— J. W. H. Trail. Germs Saxicola. ■\yHEATEAR (Saxicola cenamthe). 1. So called from the pure white, colour of the base and lower portion of the side of the tail ; whence also the names-^ White tail. Cf. Cul hlcmc (Erance). White rump (Norfolk). Wittol— i.e. White tail (Cornwall). Whiteass (Cornwall). 2. From its short, quickly repeated cry, resembling a slight blow, it is called . Chock, or Chuck (Norfolk). Chack, or Chacks (Orkney Isles). Check bird. Chickell (Devon). Chat (Northants). Snoi-ter (Dorset). Hoi-se smatch, or Horse musher (Hants). 3. From the similarity between this note and the striking together of two, pebbles it receives the names of Clocharet (Forfar). From Gaelic Cloioh, a stone. Steinkle (Shetland Isles). Stanechacker (Lancashire ; Aberdeen ; North of Ireland), i Stonechat (Northants ; Westmoreland ; West Eiding). In the county Kerry it is called, for the same reason, Custeen fay-cloiigh — i.e. the cunning little old man under the stone — spelt, probably, Coistin faei cloioh. 4. From its habit of following the. plough and hopping from clod to clod in search of grubs, etc., when turned up ; also from its frequenting upland fallows, it is called Fallow-finch ; Fallow-smich ; or Fallow-lunch. 10 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Clodhopper (Northants). Fallow chat. Of. Traine oharrue ; Garde charrue (France), 5. Various names. Cooper (South Pembroke). Dyke hopper (StMing). Jobbler (Dorset). Coney chuck (Norfolk). Prom its frequenting rabbit -warrens. 6. The wheatear was and is still much prized as a dainty. Fuller writes of it (" Worthies of England," vol. ii., p. 382) as " being no bigger than a lark, which it equalleth in the fineness of the flesh (but) far exceedeth in the fatness thereof. The worst is, that being only seasonable in the. heat of summer, and then naturally larded with lumps of fat, it is soon subject to corrupt. That palate-man shall pass in silence, who being seriously de- manded his judgment concerning the abilities of a great lord, concluded him a man of very weak parts, ' because once he saw him, at a feast, feed on chickens when there were wheatears on the table.' " John Taylor, the " Water Poet," also held thewheatear in high estimation, but is not q,uite correct in his derivation of its name : — " There were rare birds I never saw before, The like of them I think to see no more : Th'are called wheat-ears, less than lark or span-ow, Well roasted, in the mouth they taste like marrow. When once 'tis in the teeth it is involv'd, Bones, flesh, and all, is lusciously dissolv'd. The name of wheat-ears, on them is ycleped Because they come when wheat is yearly reaped, - Six weeks, or thereabouts, they are catch'd there, And are wellnigh 11 months, God knows where." ' (" Works," ed. Hindley, 1872.) 7. Folklore. The wheatear bears a bad reputation in the North of England and Soot-: land. Its presence is considered, in some localities, to foretell the death of the spectator : in others the evil fortune is only considered likely to ensue if the bird be first seen on a stone. Should its appearance be first observed while sitting on turf or gi-ass, good luck may be expected. Like the Stonechat and the Yellow ammer, it is persecuted (especially in Orkney) because toads are believed to sit on its eggs and to hatch the young birds. Mr. J. H. Trail suggests that this idea has probably originated in the fact of toads being sometimes foimd under the same stones as the nests. Mr. Mudie gives as a reason for its unpopularity its habit of fi-equenting old ruins, burial grounds, or cairns. " Its haunts, " he says, " have gotten it a bad name. Its common clear note is not unlike the sound made in breaking stones with a hammer " (hence a Tipperaiy term for the bird, Casur Clock = Stone hammer), " and as it utters that note from the top of the heap which haply covers the bones of one who perished by the storm or by his own PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 11 hand ; or from the mound beneath which there lie the slain of a battle- field, magnified through the mist of years ; or from the inide wall that fences in many generations, it is no very unnatural stretch to the pondering fancy, which dwells in these parts, to associate the \^''heatear with all 'the super- stitious that unphilosophically, but not irreverently, belong to the place of gi'aves." ' ' ■ ' Genios Peatincola. WHINCHAT {Pratincola rubetra). 1. So called from frequenting gorse bushes ; whence also the- appellations — Gorse hopper (Cheshire). Whin, or Fern lintie (Aberdeen). 2. The following names refer to its constant cry ; most of them,, at the same time, t-eferring to its favourite haunt : — Whinchat (see above). Whinchacker (Craven). Whincheck (Lancashire). Whin clocharet (Forfar). (For " clocharet " see under Wheatear, 3.). Furze chat (Worcestershire). Furr chuck (Norfolk). , Corruption of preceding. Grorse hatch. Furze hacker (Hants). Gorse chat (Westmoreland). Bush chat (West Riding). Grass chat (Do.). Utick, or Tick (Notts ; Salop). From its note, which sounds like "u-teek, u-teek." Uthage (Salop) i.q. preceding. Horse smatch. STONECHAT {Pratincola rubicola). 1 . So called from the similarity between its alarm note and the' striking together of two pebbles (see under Wheatear, 3), whence^ also Stanechacker (Craven ; Scotland). Stone cUnk ; Chickstone. Stone clocharet (Forfar). 12 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. - 2. From the impatient movement of the tail, which it is in the habit of continually jerking, as if endeavouring to strike the .stones on which it perches, it has received the names of Stone smich, or stone smith. Stane chapper. Cf. Martelot {i.e. Petit nxartemi) ; Ma/rechal (France). 3. Various names : — . Moor titling. Blacky top, or Blacky cap (Ireland). Furze hacker (Hants). Furze chitter (Cornwall). '■ This," says Jamieson (under " Clooharet ") " is one of the birds in whose natural history, as related by the vulgar, we perceive the traces of ancient superstition. It is believed in the North of Scotland that the toad covers the eggs of this bird during its absence from the nest." In other districts the stone chat is supposed to contain a drop Of the devil's blood, and to have its young hatched by the toad. (See under Wheatear, p. 9, Yellow ammer, p. 70, Magpie, p. 77.) The nest of this bird is never taken in Galloway because of the curse or malediction it is always pronouncing, which runs thus : — , " Stane chack ! Deevil tak' ! • They who harry my nest Will never rest, Will meet the pest ! Ee'il break their lang back Wha my eggs wad tak', tak.' ! " (Chambers.) Genus RuTiciLLA. 3£DSTAB.T (Rutiailla phoe/nicurus). 1. So called from the bright rust red of its tail (" Start " from A.-S. steort, a taU) whence also Red tail (Norfolk ; Oxfordshire ; Craven ; Scotland). Jenny redtail (North Riding). Fanny redtail. Brantail (Yorkshire). i.e. Brand taU, i.q. Fire taU. , Bessy brantail (Salop). Katie brantail „ Fiery brantail „ PROVINCIAL JSAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 13. Fire tail (Craven; Hants; Norfolk; Notts; Somerset; Warwick; Scotland). Fire flirt. From the continual motion of its tail, whicli it constantly jerks up and down. In Wales the redstart is called Rhondlgog, i.e. red taUed ; in Normandy, Gul rouge ; in Malta, Qudiross. 2. The male is called " whiteoap " in Shropshire, from its white forehead. Genus Erithacus. REDBREAST (Erithacus ruhemla). 1. A name derived from the red forehead and breast; whence also Ruddock (North) : A.-S. riidduc. Reddock (Dorset). Broindergh — i.e., Red belly (Gaelic). Yr hobel gog — i.e., The red bird (Wales). Cf. Eougie gorge, Soiosse, (France) ; Rothhehhen (Germany) j Barbarossa, Petti rosso (Italy). 2. Familiar names. Robin. Robin Ruck — i.e. Ruddock (North). Bob Robin (Stirling). "About Bornholm, in Sweden," says Bewick, "it is called Tomi-Liden; In Norway, Peter Bonsmad ; in Germany, Thomas Gierdet." To these Wordsworth thua-alludes : — " Art thou the bird whom man loves best, The pious bird with the scarlet breast, Our little English Eobin ? The bird that comes about our doors When autumn winds are sobbing t " Art thou the Peter of Norway boors 1 Their Thomas in Finland, And Eussia far inland ; The bird who, by some name or other, All men who know thee call thee brother ? " The explanation given by the Chippeway Indians of this friendliness tO' man is as follows. "There was once a hunter so ambitious that his only son should signalise himself by endurance, when he. came to the time of life to undergo the fast for the purpose of. choosing his guardian spirit,, that after the lad had fasted for eight days, his father still pressed him tO' .14 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. . persevere. But next day, when the father entered the hut, his son had paid the penalty of violated nature, and in the form of a robin had just flown down to the top of a lodge. There, before he flew away to the woods, he entreated his father not to mourn the transformation. ' I shall be happier,' he said, ' in my present state than I could have been as a man. I shall .always be the friend of men and keep near their dwellings ; I could not gratify your pride as a warrior, but I will cheer you with my songs I .am now free from cares and pains, my food is furnished by the fields and mountains, and my path is in the blight air.' " (Jones, "Credulities Past and Present," 378.) 3. Weather lore. In the south-east of Ireland it is believed that if a robin enters a house it is a prognostic of snow or frost, — a somewhat different opinion from that "expressed in the Suffolk rhyme given by Mr. Forby in his " Bast Anglian Tocabulary " ; — " If the robiii sings in the bush. Then the weather will be coarse ; But if the robin sings on the barn. Then the weather will be warm." 4. Folk lore. The respect with which the robin is regarded throughout Europe is probably due to its colour. The red breast, like the red head of the woodpecker and the chestnut throat of the swallow, classes it among the fire-bringing birds, all sacred to Douar, one of whosft titles was Kothbart, the red-bearded— in allusion to the fiery lightning flash. Hence arises the belief in Scotland, Yorkshire, and Germany, that if a robin is killed, one of the cows belonging to the family of the slayer, or to' the flayer himself, will give " bloody milk." A coiTespbndent of Notes and Qiteries, Ser. IV., vol. i., p. 193, gives a curiojls instance of this, occurring near Boroughbridge. — "A young woman, who had been living in service at a farmhouse, one day told her relatives how the cow belonging to her late master had given ' bloody milk ' after one of the family had killed a robin. A male cousin of hers, disbelieving the tale, went out and shot a robin purposely. Next morning her uncle's best cow, . a healthy one of thirteen years, that had borne nine calves without mishap, gave half a canful of this 'bloody mUk,' and did so for three days in suc- cession, mqrning and evening. The liquid was of a pink colour, which, after standing in the can,»became clearer, and when poured out, the ' blood,' or the deep red something like it, was seen to have settled at the bottom. The young man who shot the robin milked the cow himself on the second morning, still incredulous. The- farrier was sent for, and the matter furnished talk for the village." In Tyrol tfle harrying of a robin's nest entails an attack of epilepsy on the robber ; in Bohemia it is believed that he will always suffer from trembling of the hands. This result is also con- sidered by the country-people in Suffolk to follow from killing the bij'd (see ■ Chamiaers' " Book of Days," vol. i., p. 678), The same authority declares that a broken leg will follow the taking of a robin's eggs ; while on Dart- moor — so Mr. Henderson ("Folk Lore of the Northern Counties," pt 124) tells us — the penalty attached to this act of sacrilege is the smashing, not of ' a limb, but of all the "clomb," that is, crockery, in the house. In the West Riding of Yorkshire the killing of a robin is sure to cause misfortune.' " My father," says a young miner, "killed a robin, and had terrible bad luck after it ! He had at that time a pig which was ready for pigging : she had a litter PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BKITISH BIRDS. 15 of seven, and they all died. When the pig was killed the two hams went bad I Presently three of the fa&ily had a fever, and my father himeen died , of it ! " {Notes akd Querieg, Sev.lY., vol. viii., p. 503.) -5. Sacred legends connected with the robin. a. Cross legends. The Bretons say (" La Bretagne," par M"» C. Barb^, p. 361) that while our Saviour was hanging on the Cross (another version relates it was whilst He was bearing the Cross to Calvary), a robin plucked a thorn from His ■ crowncin pity, and, in doing so, wounded his own breast. As a reward he is endowed with a perpetual existence, and with the power of enriching a young girl every year. (See also " Le Foyer Breton," i., p. 107.) Another Breton legend, given by Rolland, p. 263, runs as follows :— ' "When the Blessed Saviour was hanging in agony upon the Cross, two birds perched upon it. One was a magpie, which at that time had the gayest plumage of all the feathered race. A tuft adorned her head, and her tail rivalled the peacock's in.bpilliancy. But alas 1 her beauty was only equalled by her wickedness, and the evil creature insulted' the Redeemer while suffering His last agony. The other was a tiny bird of dusky hue, ' who timidly approached the Ci'oss, uttering plaintive chirps of sorrow: with her wings she 'Wiped away the tears that flowed from the Saviour's eyes, while with her beak she plucked out the thorns Which pierced His brow. Suddenly a drop of blood fell from His fbrehead on her breast and tinged with scarlet its dull brown feathers. ' Blessed be thou,' said the Lord to her, ' thou sharer in my sufferings. Wherever thou goest happiness and joy shall follow thee ; blue as the heaven shall be thy eggs, and from hence- forth thon shalt be " the Bird of God," the bearer of good tidings. But thou,' and He addi'essed the magpie, 'thou art cursed. No longer shall the brilliant tuft and bright feathers, of which thou art so proud and at the same time so unworthy, adorn thee; thy colour shall be sad and sombre, thy life a hard one ; ever, too, shall thy nest be; open to the storm.' " (For other Cross legends see infra.') ' b. Legends connected with the Virgin, saints, etc. "On assure en Bretagne que le bon Dieu I'appelle dans son Paradis pour lui sucer le sang, lorsqu'il s'en trouve incommode " (I) (Souvestre.) " Once upon a time a bit of straw was blown into the Blessed Virgins eye. The redbreast (in Basque Chindorra), who was sitting on a bush close . a,t hand, beheld her tears. What did he do ? Flew off at once to tell the swallow, and then, carrying in his bill some clear water from a neighbouring stream, he returned with tis friend, and perched on the Virgin's face. Then, whilst the redbreast tenderly let the liquid fall into the eye, the swallow gently passed his long tail feathers under the lid, and so removed the straw." (From the Basque, in Melusine, col. 554.) A legend of the Greek Church tells us that our Lord used to feed the robins round His mother's door, when a boy ; moreover, that the robin never left the sepulchre till the Resurrection, and, at the Acesnsion, joined in the .angels' song. (iV". and Q., Ser. V., vol. iv., p. ^6.) The following occurs in the life of S. Kentigem, Bishop of Glasgow (Baring Gould, "Lives of tlie Saints," Jan. 13): — " S. Sewan had a pet . redbreast, which was wont to eat out of his hand, and to perch on his shoulder, and when he chanted the Psalms of David the little bird flapped its wings and twittered shrilly. Now, Sewan had several lads whom he educated at Culross, and these envied Kentigem, because ^he was the favourite of the old master, so in spite they wrung the neck of the redbreast. 16 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BKITISH BIEDS. and charged the favourite boy with having done the deed. But Kentigern took the little bird, and, crying bitterly and praying to God, signed the Cross over it. Then, when the old man returned from church, the bird hopped to meet him as usual, chirping joyously." S. Kentigern became the founder of Glasgow Cathedral, and in after years the choristers used to sing on the festival of the saint a hymn in which the following verse occurs :;— " Garrit ales pemecatus Cocus est resuscitatus Salit vervex trucidatus Amputate capite ! " c. In " La Dictionnaire des Superstitions." by M. du Chessel, under " Rouge Gorge," the following tradition is narrated. (The translation is by Mr. Baring . Gould, and is to be found in his " Sermons for Extempore Preachers," pp, 12, 73.) " Some few monks came into Brittany in ages past, when that country was heathen. They built a rude shed, in which to dwell, and a chapel of moor stones, and then prepared to till the soil. But alas 1 they had no wheat. Then one spied a robin redbreast sitting on a cross tTiey had set up, and from his beak dangled an ear of wheat. They drove the bird away and secured the grain, sowed it, and next year had more ; sowed again, and so by degrees were able to sow large fields and gather abundant harvests. If you go now into Brittany and wonder at the waving fields of golden grain, the peasants will tell you all came from Eobin redbreast's ear of corn." " In Scotland," says Mr. McGregor (" Folk-lore of the West of Scotland," p. Ill), "there was a popular saying that the robin had a drop of God's blood in his veins, and that therefore' to kill or hurt it was a, sin." (See above, 4). " The swallow and the yellowhammer, on the contrary, were persecuted for having a share of the devil's blood." For this reason, as well as for having endeavoured to relieve the Saviour's agony, is it that " Since then no wanton boy disturbs her nest : Weasel nor wild-cat will her young molest. All sacred deem the bird of ruddy breast," — and that, as they say in Essex, " The Eobin and the Redbreast, The Robin and the Wren, If ye take out of the nest Ye'll never thrive again. The Robin and the Redbreast, v The martin and the swallow. If ye touch one of their eggs Bad luck will sure to follow." d. The Eobin redbreast as a fire-bringer. There are two legends with which I am acquainted in which the descent of fire is directly attributed to this bird. One is derived from Guernsey, and is related by Mr. McCuUoch in iVI and Q., Ser. V., vol. iii., p. 492, who heard it from an old woman, a native of the island. She declared that the- robin was the first who brought fire to Guernsey, and that, in crossing the water, his feathers were singed, so his breast has remained red ever sinee. She added, " My mother had a great veneration for the robin, for what should we have done without fire 1 " The second is a Breton version of " the Owl and the Wren " (see under Strigidse, p. 124), in which the redbreast takes the place of the .latter bird. It is also believed by the Bretons that PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 17 tHose redbreasts which have been to seek for the fire can speak Latin. More- I over, that they sing " Cusse, cusse, cnsse, cusse, 1 Istine spiritum sanctum tuum, ' II y a dix bons dieux." In the two following traditions the redbreast appears closely connected with theisame element. The first ;s from JV.- and, Q:, Ser. I., vol. viii., p. 328, and is contributed by a gentleman who says it was told to him when a child by his nurse, a Caermarthenshire woman. " Far, far away, is a land of woe, darkness, spirits of evil, and fire. Day by day does the little bird bear in his bill a drop of water to quench the fiame. So near to the burning stream does he fly, that his dear little feathers are scorched, and hence he is named Bronrhuddyn {i.e. breast burned, or breast scorched)., To^ serve little children the robin dares approach the infernal pit. KTo good child will hurt the devoted benefactor of man. The robin returns from the land of fire, and therefore he feels the cold of winter far more than his brother birds. He shivers in the brumal blast : hungry he chirps before your door. Oh ! my child, then in grsltitude throw a few crumbs tq poor . redbreast ! " The second is from EoUand, p. 264 : " When the wren brought down fire from heaven, and in consequence lost all her plumage owing to its being scorched away, the other birds with one accord gave her, each of them, one of their feathers. The robin, in his anxiety and trouble, came too close to the poor wren, who was in flames, and his plumage took fire also, traces of which are still visible on his breast." (See above, 4 ; also under Owl, p. 124, and Wren, p. 42.) Another curious superstition points conclusively in the same direction, given by M. Eollandas prevalent in the west of France. " On Candlemas day the country people kill a cock redbreast, run a spit of haael wood through the body, and place it before the fire, when it at once begins to turn of itself." Now the hazel was a tree sacred. to Donar, and "regarded as an actual embodiment of vthe lightning " (Mannhardt, " Die Gbtterwelt der Deutschen," p. 193), so here the connection between' the bird and the fire is self-evident. e. The robin as covering the bodies of the dead. Who does not know the ballad of "The Children in the Wood," and remember how that " No burial these pretty babes Of any man receives, Till Eobin Kedbreast piously Did cover them with leaves "? This, according to Bishop Percy, is taken from an old play by Robert Tarrington, 1601 ; but we find the tradition earlier. In Johnson's " Cornu- copia," published towards the close of the sixteenth century, it is said that ." the robin redbreast, if he find a man or woman dead, wUl cover his face ' "with moss ; and some think that if the body should remain unburied he will cover the whole body." It seems to have been an old popular belief, which, Mr. Knight declares, " is found in an earlier book of natural history," but I am unable to discover any written trace of its existence previous to the quotation already cited. The opinion is mentioned, both in prose and verse, by many writers of the seventeenth century. Decker, in his " Villanies discovered by Lanthom and Candlelight" (1616), says : " They that cheere up a prisoner but with their sight, are Eobin Eedbreasts, that bring straws in their bills to cover a dead man in his extremity." Isaac 2 18 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Walton also speaks of the robin " that loves mankind both alive and dead." Shakespeare, Cymleline (Act. IV., sc. v.), alludes to "the ruddock with charitable bill." Drayton ("Noah's Flood," 1537) also calls him "the charitable robinet," and in " The Owl," 1291, writes how that " Covering with moss the dead's unclosed eye, ' The little redbreast teacheth charitie " ; while Webster (T/ie White Devil) couples.the wren with the robin as fellow, helpers : — " ■ " Call for the redbreast and the wren. Since o'er shady groves they hover. And with leaves and flowers do cover The friendless bodies of unburied men." The same belief prevails in Germany and in Lorraine ; while in Haute Bretagne the peasants say that the hen redbreast and the f auvette (^Motaeilla orphea) sing, songs of pity around dead bodies, and will' not quit them till they are interred. ■ Grimm (" D. .M." ii. 683) suggests that the bird performed this office to the dead in the service of a god, probably Donar, who therefore would not suffer him to be molested. /. The robin and the wren. There is an old tradition that the wren is the robin's wife, and there are several rhymes referring to the relationship — e.g., " The robin and the wren Are God's Cock and hen." " The robin redbreast and the wren Are God Almighty's cock and hen." Mr. Chambers (p. 187) mentions an addition to this belief — viz., that the wren is the paramour of the ox-eye, or tit ; and gives at length a very curious song grounded on this idea, which may also be found in Herd's " Ballads," ii., 209. He also quotes an amusing verse on the matrimonial squabbles of the two birds : — " The robin redbreast and the wran J Coost out about the parritch pan ; And ere the robin got a spune The wran she had the parritch dune." g. Appearance of redbreasts in Scilly Isles. Dr. Bastwick, having severely satirised Archbishop Laud, was sent to these islands (1637), " where," says]Prynne, " many thousands of robin red- breasts (none of which birds were ever seen in ^hose islands before, nor since) newly arrived at the castle there the evening before, welcomed him with their melody, and within one day or two after took their flight from thence, no man kno'ys whither." These birds were evidently regarded as a Bign of the captive's future deliverance, which soon was the case. Genus Luscinia. NIGHTINGALE {Davlias i.e., night- singer ; from A.-S. Nihte, gen. of Niht, iiight, and Gcde, a singer. Called Barley-bird in East Anglia, becavise, says F(jrby, "it PBOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS, 19 comes in the season of so-wing barley." Halliwell remarks that the greenfinch (Ligurimus cMoris) ' has the same title sometimes given to it, and that the name is still more frequently applied to the siskin. Stevenson doubts its application to the nightingale, but thinks it belongs to the yellow wagtail {Motacilla Raii), which often frequents fields of newly-sown spring corn. 1 . Time of arrival. This is fixed by the old saying : — " On the third of April (old style) Come in the cuckoo and the nightingale which corresponds with the German :-^ (ffl) " Wenn Maximus tritt in die JIall So bringt er uns die Nachtigal ; " i.e. 'When S. Maximus (April li) enters the porch he brings us the nightin- gale.' (5) " Tiburtius kommt mit Euf und Schall, Er bringt den Kuknk und die Naohtigal ;" , i.e. 'S. Tiburtius (April 14) arrives with song and call ; he brings the cuckoo and the nightingale.' These two birds are frequently found closely united in folk lore and song; Mr. Hardy in his excellent monograph on the " Popular History of the Cuckoo,' suggests' that' the intention is to contrast the quahty of their song. He mentions, in support of this, the fabje where the cuckoo disputes for superiority in singing -with the nightingale ; and the ass, supposed to be the best judge in music on account of his long ears, being called in to decide the question, declares for the cuckoo. Then the nightingale appeals from the unjust sen- tence to man, singing melodiously. It is remarkable that the Hindoo MkHas, or Indian cuckoo, is for their poets what the nightingale is for ours. There also appears to have been a popular prognostication with regard to the season which was to follow from the fact of the cuckoo or nightingale being . first heard. A question on this subject was asked in N. amd Q., Ser. V. , vol. i., p. 387, but the only information that could be given was a reference to '^Ghaaeer's' poem of "The Cuckoo and the Nightingale," in Wordsworth's modernised version of which the following lines occur : — " I of a token thought which lovers need ; How among them it was a common tale, ■ f hat it was good to hear the nightingale Ere the vile cuckoo's note be uttered. " 2. Haunts of the nightingale. The nightingale is a very local bird, only partially distributed over England ; being heard very rarely in Devon, never in Cornwall, neither in Scotland nor Ireland. It has been suggested by Mr. Johns that the reason of this is that " it dislikes along sea voyage, and that when in spring it migrates northward and westward, it crosses the English Channel at the narrowest parts only, spreads itself over the nearest counties in the direction of its migration, but is instinctively prevented from turning so far back again to, the south as the ■ south-west peninsula of England." It was currently believed that the night- ingale was only to be met with where cowslips grew, but this has been pro'ved to be a fallacy ; also that there was some connecting link between this bird and hops. This latter idea was mentioned in N. and Q., Ser. III., vol. i., p. 447, 20 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. where it is quoted as being current near Donoaster, but only to be refuted by Cuthbert Bede, who shows that, though hops have disappeared from Hunting- donshire, yet nightingales abound. In the same publication, Ser. II., vol. iv., p. 215, a legend is mentioned to the effect that there are no nightingales at at Havering alte Bower, in Essex, because Edward the Confessor, being interrupted there in his meditations, prayed that their song might not be heard again. This, however, is shown to be incorrect ; for the Bev. R. E. Faulkner, who was incumbent of Havering, in a work " The Grave of Emuia Vale at Havering Bower," says, "Their sweet notes are stiU heard chanting their Maker's praises amidst the shady groves of this pretty village." St. Leonards Forest, too, in Sussex, was supposed to be shunned for some inexplic- able reason by the nightingale. Andrew Boorde, in his " Book of Knowledge," declares that " in the Forest of Saint Leonards, in Southsex, there doth never singe Nightingale, althoughe the Foreste rownde aboute in tyme of the yeare is replenyshed with Kightyngales ; thay wyl syng round aboute the Forest and never within the precinote of the Forest, as divers Kepers of the Fpreste and other credible persons dwellyng there dyd shew me " (N. and Q., Ser. II., vol. iv. p. 45). The nightingales were said to have once disturbed a hermit who had fixed his cell in the forest ; he bestowed a curse upon them in "return for their songs, and from that time they were unable to pass the the boundary. (See " Sussex Archaeological Collections," xiii. 222.) ' 3. It was a commonly received belief that the nightingale never sings by day : hence her name. To account for this (which is perfectly erroneous, as she sings by day as constantly as by night, only in the daytime her voice' is lost in the chorus of the other birds) the French and German peasants give some curious reasons : e.g. — a. One day the nightingale, having overslept herself while perched on '^ vine stock, found her feet entangled in the tendrils. Hence it is that she never closes her eyes from the time when the vines begin to shoot, and cries in March to the vinedresser : " Taille vite, taille vite, taUle vite, que ]e puisse dormir " ; while later on she sings in a softer strain-: " Vigneron, ta vigne pousse, pousse, pousse— ^dans ton bouchet ! " (Perron, " Proverbes de la Franche Comt^.") -' 6. The country people in the neighbourhood of Toulouse say that the bird sings at night to keep herself awake, fearing lest, in her slumber, the tendrils of the Virgin's Seal (Tamiius communis) should' twist themselves round her feet. c. The following is from M. Laisnel de la Salle's " Croyances et Ldgendes du Centre de la France " (ii. 245). "The story goes that once upon a time, the blindworm had excellent eyes, but that the nightingale, who was then sightless, borrowed them so that she might attend a fairy wedding. When the festivities were over she refused to return them, and ever since does she continue her song through night and day to soothe the sorrow of her confiding friend." d. Another version of the preceding. " The nightingale and the blindworm had only one eye apiece. Having (jeen invited to the wren's wedding, the former was ashamed to show herself in such a condition, so one day she surprised the snake while asleep and stole his eye. On discovering his loss he said, ' When I catch you asleep, I will get it back I ' ' Will you ? ' wag the bird's reply ; ' I will take care never to go to sleep again.' And so, ever since, from fear of being caught, the nightingale continues singing both day ' and night." e. The Westphalian peasants say that, the nightingale is a shepherdess,, who was once unkind to a shepherd that loved her : she was always promising but PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 21 postponing marriage, till at last the shepherd could bear it no longer, and littered the wish that she might not sleep till the day of judgment. Nor does she ; for her voice may be always heard at night, as she cries — ' Is tit, is tit, to wit, to, wit — Trizy, Trizy, to bucht, to bucht, to bucht ' — the last syllables forming the shepherdess's cry to her good dog Trizy. From Kuhn, " Sagen etc. auaWestfalen," ii. 75, quoted by Mr. J. A. Farrer in an article on "Animal Mythology," in the OomhiU Magazine. ' 4. Nightingale and thorn. Sir Thomas Browne, inhis "Vulgar Errors," Book III., u. xxviii., places among the difficult cases concerning which he is desirous of awakening consideration, the following — " Whether the nightiugal's sitting with her breast against a thorn be any more than that she placeth some prickles on the outside of her nest, or roosteth in thorny and prickly places, where serpents may least approach her." The bird's fear of these reptiles is alluded to in a sermon of Thomas Adams, of -Wellington (Works, ii. 485) : "They say the nightingale sleeps with her breast against a thorn to avoid the serpent;" and also by Aneau ("Description philosophale de la Nature," Paris, 1571) in the following lines : — " Au printemps, doux et gracieux, Le rossignol a pleine voix Donne louange au dieu des dieux, Tant qu'il faict retentir les boys. Peur du serpent il chante fort, Toute nuict et met sa poictrine Centre quelque poignante espine Qui le riveille quand il dort." Shakespeare, too, in "Lucrece," suggests that she uses the thoi;n to keep herself awake, but not for the same reason : — " And whiles against a thorn thou bear'st thy part To keep thy sharp woes waking," The origin of this beUef cannot be ascertained ; though a correspondent of the Zoologist (1862) declares as a matter of fact that he has twice discovered a strong thorn projecting upwards in the centre of the nest. But, as Mr. Harting remarks (" Ornithology of Shakespeare," p. 127), " it can hardly be do'ubted that this was the result of accident rather than design ; and Mr. Hewitson, in his 'Eggs of British Birds, ' has adduced two sim3ar instances in the case of the hedge sparrow." 6. A story in the English " Gesta Romanorum " (Bohn's edition, p. xlix) seems to place the nightingale in the same category as the woodpecker, the swallow, the raven, hoopoe, and other birds possessing the knowledge of wonder-working stones of talismanic power; A certain knight, we read, " was imprisoned in a dreary fortress. He had no light but a, little window, whereat scant light shone in, that lighted bim to eat such simple meat as the keeper brought him ; wherefore he mourned greatly, and made sorrow that he was thus fast shut up from the sight of men.- Nevertheless, w(hen the keeper was gone, there came daily a nightingale in at the window, and sung full sweetly, by whose song this woeful knight was sometimes fed with joy : and when the bird left off singing, then would she fly into the knight's bosom, and there this knight fed her many a day, of the victual that God -sent him. It bef el after, upon a day, that the knight was greatly desolate of comfort. Nevertheless the bird that sat in his bosom fed upon kernels of nuts ; and thus he said to the bird, — ' Sweet bird, I have sustained thee many a day : what wilt thou give me now in my desolation to comfort me ? Remember thyself well, how that thou art the creature of God, and so am I also, and therefore help me now in this great 22 PBOVmdlAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. need.' Wteu the bird heard this, she flew from his 13080111, and tarried from him three days ; but the third day she came again, and brought in her mouth a precious stone, and laid it in the knight's bosom. And when she had so done, she took her flight and flew from him again. The knight marvelled at the stone, and at the bird, aind forthwith he took-the stone in his hand, and touched his gyves and fetters therewith, and presently they fell off. And then he arose and touched the doors of his prison, and they opened, and he escaped, and ran fast to the Emperor's palace. When the keeper of the prison perceived this, he blew his horn thrice, and raised up all the folk of the city, and led them forth, crying with a loud voice, ' Lo ! the thief is gone ; follow we him all.' And with that he ran before all his fellows to the knight. And when he came riigh him the knight bent his bow and shot an arrow, wherewith he smote the keeper in the lungs, and slew him ; and then ran to the palace, where he found succour against the law. " 6. The note of tLe nightingale. In olden times the nightingale had a dog to which he was much attached. One day he tied it to a tree-stump (sicoi), while he went for a walk ; but alas ! during his absence the animal in his struggle to get loose, pulled up the stump and escaped. The bird laments his loss thus — " Kaie va,' Kaie va ! Fuit, fuit ! sioot, sicot ! " Others say that the nightingale was a sportsman who had four dogs. One day, when out shooting, he tied them to a stump while he refreshed himself at a public-house. But during his absence they ran off. (Haute Bretagne.) 7. The nightingale in medicinal folk lore. "The eyes and heaft of a nightingale," says an old writer, "laid about men in bed, keep them awake. To make one die for sleep. — If any one dissolve them, and give them secretly to any one in drink, he will never sleep, but will so die, and it admits not of cure." If a person eats the heart of a nightingale, he will sleep only for two hours, because that bird sleeps only for two hours in the night. But this is danger- ous, for. if the wind changes in the twenty-four hours, he runs the risk of going mad. (Haute Bretagne.) 8. "If any man rob a nightingale of her young," the Bohemians say, "shefirst of all flies anxiously round the nest in search of them. If she cannot find them, she hangs herself, through grief, from a forked branch. ' ' (Krolmus i. 91.) Suh-fomdly Sylviin^e. Genus Sylvia. WHITETHROAT (Sylvia cinerea). 1. So called from the white colour of its lower parts; whence (and also from its grey head) White Untie (Forfar). Whitecap. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIKDS. 33 2. Its harsh continuous note has given it the names of Churr. Churr muffit (Stirling). For Muffit seerbelow. Peggy chaw, or Peggy cut-throat (Midlands). Wheetie why. Blethering Tarn (Eenfrew)^. Whattiey or Whishie (East'Lothian). 3. Because its light-coloured head and neck feathers stand out more thickly than is usual in other birds (MacgUlivray), it is called Charlie muftie,'or Muffit (Stirling); Whey beard : Wheetie whey beard : or Whittle beard. Beardie (Scotland). Of. JBwrbecliatte (Anjou). 4. From its habit of creeping through the lower parts of hedges where nettles are abundant, it has received the names Nettle creeper : Nettle monger (North Riding ; Hants). Nettle bird (Leicestershire). Hay Jack (Norfolk ; Suffolk). Hazeck (Worcestershire). , Haysucker (Devon). From 0. E. heisugge (see under Hedge accentor). Hedge chicken. ' 5. It forms its nest of line pieces of grass, bits of straw, feathers and wool, hence it is called Feather bird (Northants). Hay tit (Oxfordshire ; Salop). Strawsmear (Westmoreland). Strawsmall (West Biding). Winnell straw, or Jack straw (Salop). Flax (Salop). 6. Familiar names. Muggy or Meggie (North). I'eggy (Notts). Great Peggy (Leicestershire). Jenijie, or Meg cut-throat (Eoxburgh). Billy whitethroat (Salop). 7. Various names. Caperlinty (Jedburgh). Bee bird (Devon). Mr. John says that it is called in France Grisette, from its grey plumage, and Babilla/rde, from its constant song. 24- PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. The name of " Singing sky rocket " has abo been applied to it, from its habit of rising quickly, from time to time, straight up into the air, singing all the time. Cf . Mousquet (Gaid). BLACKCAP {Sylvia atricapilla). 1. So called from the tuft of black feathers on the head of the male bird ; -whence also King Harry black cap (Norfolk). Coal hoodie (North Biding). Black-headed hay-jack (Norfolk). Black-headed Peggy. Cf . Fauvette d, tete noire (France) ; Schwarzkopf (Germany). 2. This bird builds its nest of hay, roots, and hair, in a low bush or hedge, hence its names Jack straw (Somerset). Hay laird (Northants). Hay chat (Northants). Hay Jack (Northants). 3. Various names. Mock nightingale. From the melody of its song. Nettle creeper. Nettle monger. GOLDEN WAKBLER {Sylvia hortmsis). 1. From the dull white of the throat it has received the names of Garden whitethroat. Billy whitethroat (East Lothian). 2. Also called Streasmear (Westmoreland). Strawsmear. Small straw (West Riding). From the materials of which its nest is composed. Greater petty-chaps. I'eggy. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BKITISH BIRDS. 25 G&nuB Eegulus, GOLSCEEST {Regulus cristatus). 1. So called from its crest of golden-coloured feathers, from -which, as -well 'as from its diminutive size, it has received the names of Golden-crested wren. Grolden wren (Stirling). ' Golden cutty (Hants). Cutty is a name for the wren (which see), from its short tail. Marigold finch-. » Tidley goldfinch (Devon). Kinglet. 2. Various names. Wood titmouse (Cornwall). Moon, moonie, or mviin (Roxburgh). MiUer's thumb (Roxburgh). Thumb bird (Hants). From its tiny size. Tot o'er seas (vid. i^f.) Herring spink (East Suffolk). "The golden-erested wren is so called, often caught by the hand while ■* latching ' in the rigging, or among the gear, during the North Sea fishing. These little birds, it seems, are then crossing the seas (see above, Tot o'er seas) for the winter, and haye been found, 1 am told, clustered almost like bees along the hedges near Caistor — so tired as to be taken by hand on shore, as by the sailors at sea. They call the bird ' Woodcock pilot ' farther north, being sup- 3*sed to herald the woodcock two days in advance." (" Sea Words and Phrases along the Suffolk Coast," in the East Anglian, vol. iv., p. 115). Genus Phylloscopus. CHIFFCHAIT {Phylloscopus rufus). 1. The chiffchaff derives its name from its constantly repeated short, hurried note ; whence also Chip chop. Choice and cheep (Devon — neighbourhood of Totnes). 2. This bird resembles the willow wren or willow warbler {Phyl- loscopus trochilus) very closely in size, colour and ha.bits, hence many names common to the latter bird are applied to it : e.g., Sally picker (Ireland). " Sally " = sallow {i.e. willow). Peggy (West Riding). Least willow wren. 26 PEQVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 3. Various names : — ^ • Lesser petty-ckaps. Thummie. * From its small size. Bank-bottle or -jug (Bedfordshire). From the shape and situation of its nest, which, being covered with a dome, is called wood oven ; also, in Oxfordshire, feather poke or feather hed, from its. lining. WILLOW "WARBLER {Phylloscopus trochilus). 1 . So called from its haunts ; whence also Willow wren. Willow sparrow (West Riding). Sally picker (Ireland). See cmte, under ChifFchaff. Ground wren (Scotland). Ground Isaac (Devon). From O. E._ heisugffe. 2. The colour of the bird, a yellowish-white in the under parts, has 'given it the names of YfeUow wren. Golden wren (Ireland). White wren (Scotland). 3. Names arising from peculiarities of the nest. a. Locality. Bank jug. • b. Materials. Hay bird (England ; Scotland generally), Strawsmeer. feather bed (Oxon). Feather, poke, i.e. Feather bag (West Riding). Mealy mouth (Craven). WUlie muftie (Scotland). Muffie wren (Renfrew). Grass mumruffin (Worcestershire). c. Shape. Oven bird (Norfolk). Ovea'tit (ditto). , Ground oven (ditto). 4. From its diminutive size it is called Tom thumb (Roxburgh). Miller's thumb. PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 27 5. Various names. Huck muck. - Bee bird. Sweet Billy (Notts). Peggy (West Biding ; Salop). A name given also to the wren. ' Smeu, Smooth, or Smeuth (Stirling). WOOD WARBLER {phyUoscopus siUlatrix). ' 1. So called from its partiality to woodland districts; whence- also Wood wren (Somerset). 2. Its various shades of colour have given this bird the names Yellow wren. From its briglit yellow throat and streaks oyer the eyes. Green wren. From the green hue of the upper plumage. Linty white. From the pure white of the under parts of the body, 3. Also called- Hay bird (West Riding). Because the nest is composed of dried grass, and placed on the ground iu thick herbage. Germs Aceocephalus. REED "WKBiSLESi {Acrocephalus streperus). 1.' So called from its frequenting reeds; whence also Eeed wren. Water sparrow (Salop). 2. The name of night warbler is also given to this bird, because its cry may be heard at almost all hours. - SEDGE WARBLER {Aaroaeplialus phragmitis). . 1. This bird derives its name from its favourite haunts being the banks of sedgy pools and streams. Also called Sedge wren. Sedge bird. 28 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Sedge marine (Norfolk). Water sparrow (Salop). 2. It continues its song after dusk and through the night; hence Night singer (Ireland). Irish nightingale (ditto). Scotch nightingale (Eoxburgh ; Stirling). 3. Various names. Hay tit (Oxfordshire). From the material of which its nest is composed. teg bird. Sally picker (Ireland). See Willow Warbler, 1. Chat. From its sharp cry. Chamcider, or Channy (Hants). Genus Locustella. 6EASSH0FFEB. WARBLER {Locustella ncevia). 1. So called from its cry, which resembles the note of the oricket pr grasshopper ; whence Grasshopper lark. ' Cricket bird (Norfolk). 2. It has also the name of Brake hopper, from its" habit of lurking in thick bushes. Sub-family AccENTORiNi!. Genus AccENTOE. HEDGE SPARROW {Accentor modularis). 1. A bird mostly seen in hedges ; hence its name. Also called Hedge spurgie (Aberdeen). From Icel. sporr, a flutterer. Bush sparrow (Stirling). Whin sparrow (East Lothian). Field sparrow, or Fieldie (Roxburgh). Hedge warbler ; Hedge accentor ; Hedge chanter PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 2^ Hedge chat (Northants). Hedge spick, or Hedge mike (Sussqx). Dykesmowler. Isaac, or Hazock (Worcestershire). Segge (Devon). The three latter names are from the Old English heisugge. (See Chaucer^ " AssembUe of Foules," 612, where the cuckoo is called " Murdrer of the heysugge on the hraunch That brought thee forth.") 2. Familiar names. Billy (Oxon). Cuddy (Craven). Dickie (Lancashire). 3. Names given from the dusky colour of the plumage. Blue Isaa« (Gloucestershire). See above. Blue Tom (Scotland). Blue sparrow (Scotland). Blue Jannie. Blue dickie (Renfre*). The throat, neck, and breast are of a bluish-grey. Black wren (Ireland). Dnnnock (Lancashire ; West Riding ; Somerset), Doney (Lancashire). 4. From its short piping note it is called Titlene (North). Pinnock. Philip or Phip. A term for the house sparrow (which see). 5. Other names. Hempie (Yorkshire ; Scotland). Shuffle- wing (Craven). ■ From its peculiar shake of the wings, becoming a flutter in the breeding season. Eeefouge (Ireland). Creepie (Kirkcudbright). From its movement, which is that of short hops, or a creeping attitude. Sparve (West Cornwall). A.-S. spearwa, a sparrow. Blind dunnook (Somerset). ■ " From its stupid blindness in not distinguishing the cuckoo's egg when laid in its nest." (Cecil Smith.) 30 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Family CincliDjE. Genus Cinclus. DIFFER {Cinclus aquaticus). 1. So called from its diving propensities, which, combined with the dark back, give it the names Bessie ducker. Water ouzel. Water blackbird (Scotland ; Ireland). Water crow (Westmoreland ; Lowlands generally). Water thrush (Cornwall). Cf. Merle plongeur (France), Wasserwmsel (German Switzer- land). 2. The white breast and blackish upper plumage have caused it to be called Piet (Scotland). Water piet (Scotland). River pie (Ireland). 3. Various names. Water crake. Kingfisher (Highlands generally ; Ireland), From its flight, which is like that of the kingfisher, rapid and straightforward. For the same reason it is helieved'in some parts of England to be the femalie kingfisher, the blue and red bird being the male. Ess cock (Aberdeen). Water Peggie (Dumfries). Water colly (Somerset). For " colly " see under Ring ouzel {Turdus torquatus). The Norwegian name is Fosse konge, i.e. King of the waterfall. The Gaelic appellations for the dipper are Gobha uisge — i.e. Water (black)smith, and Gohha dhuhh nan allt — i.e. Blacksmith of the stream. Family Panueid^. Genus Panueus. BEARDED TITMOUSE {Panurus Bearded pinnock. From the tuft of black feathers, resembling a moustache, beneath the eye. Cf. Misa/nge a mouatactie (France). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 31 Eeed bunting (Essex). Reed pheasant, or simply, pheasant (Norfolk). Lesser butcher bird. Family Parid^. TITMICE. Titmouse is compounded of Tit = small, and A.-S. Mdse, a name for several small birds, akin to Meise (Germany), Mhange (France). Grimm tells us that these birds were held to be sacred and inviolable by the ancient Germans, and severe penalties were exacted from those who entrapped them. He also adds that the Lettons, who call them " Sihle," regard them as prophetic and auspicious, and even caU a soothsayer " Sihl- neeks." On the other hand, in the neighbourhood of Valenciennes titmice are hunted down by the children, who believe that they betrayed the Saviour. (Hdgart, " Diet. Eouchi-Fran?ois.") Genus Acredula. BRITISH LONG-TAILED TITMOUSE {Acredula rosea), 1. This bird owes its name to its great length" of tail, hence it is called Long-tailed Mag or Long-pod (Midlands). Long-tailed pie. Long-tailed capon (Hants ; Norfolk). Long-tailed mufflin. From the resemblance that the tufted feathers surrounding the face present to a muffler. 2. Whence also are derived Mumruffin, or hedge mumrnffin (Worcestershire ; Salop). Eagamuffin. Puflat (East Lothian). 3. The penduline form of the nest, and the feathers which com- pose the lining, have obtained for the bird the names of Jack in a bottle. Bottle Tom. 32 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Bottle tit (West Riding ; Berks ; Bucks ; Midlands ; Salop). Bag (NoTthants). Poke pudding or Poke bag (Gloucestershire ; Salop). Pudding bag f Norfolk). Feather poke. Called in the soutli of France, D4hassaire, i.e. Stocking maker, for the same reason. Oven bird or oven builder (Stirling). Can bottle (Salop). Bum barrel (Notts). Bush oven (Norfolk). Oven's nest (Northants). Hedge jug. 4. Various names. Prinpriddle, i.e. Tree babbler (Cornwall). French magpie. From its colour. Cf. Pie moitchet (Jura). Bum towel (Devon). Bellringer (Kirkcudbright). Millithrum, i.e. Miller's thumb." From its small size. Nimble tailor (Salop). 5. In Shropshire the nest of this bird is called " Hat full o' feathers." Genus Parus. GREAT TITMOUSE (Parus moQw). 1. From its black head it has obtained the names Black cap, or black capped lolly (Northants ; "West Biding). Black-headed Bob (Devon). Black-headed tomtit (Salop ; Stirling). i. Also called Sit ye down. Joe Ben (Suffolk).' Ox eye (Midlands; Salop; North Biding; Ireland). Big ox eye (Forfar ; Ea^t Lothian ; Eoxburgh). So called from its size. In France the gold-crest {Regulus cnstatm) is called CSU etc OCSUj' PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 33 Saw sharpener (Roxburgh,). Sharp saw (Norfolk). , The two last names are given to it from its peculiar, harsh, grating oaU-notes ■ Cf. Serrurier (Cdte d'Or), Accuzmferra (Sardinia). ' Pridden pral, i.e. Tree babbler (West Cornwall). Heckymal (Dartmoor). From its powerful beak. Tom noup — i.e. nope (Salop). See under Bulfinch. In Spain this bird is called Gid (Lord) or Qid paxaro (Lord sparrow) ; also Cruerrero, i.e. warrior, or rather brawler — because titmice are always quarrelling with other birds, or among them- selves. 3. Weather prognostic. The saw-like note o£ this bird foretells rain. BRITISH COLE TITMOUSE {Parus ■ Britannious ; Ger. Kolmeise). 1 . The following names refer to this bird's glossy black head and neck : — Coal, or Coaly hood (Scotland). Coal hooden (East Lothian). Black cap (Salop ; Stirling). , Black ox-eye (Forfar). In Ireland it is called Tomtit. 2. In the old laws of the Eheingau the ensnarer of a cole, tit was severely fined : " Wer eine kolmeise fienge mit limen oder mit slagegarn, der sal unserme herrn geben eine f albe henne mit sieben hunkeln." (Grimm, " D. M.," ii. 683.) ' MARSH TITMOUSE {Parus pcdustris). Black cap (Notts), Cf. Golle norette — i.e. Calotte noire (France). Joe ben (East Anglia). Saw whetter (Staffordshire). See under Great Titmouse. BLUE TITMOUSE {Parus , . So called from its prevailing colour ; whence also — Blue cap or Blue bonnet (Salop ; West Riding ; Scotlajid). Blue yaup (Scotland). See below, 3. Blue ox-eye (Forfar). Blue spick (North Devon). 3 34 PROVINCIAL NiMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 2. From the strong pecks which it deals with its bill are derived the names (all used in Devon and Cornwall)^ Hickmall ; Hackmal ; Heckymal ; Hagmal ; Hackeymal ; Titmal. 3. Its loud chirping cry is shrill and often repeated ; hence Yaup (Renfrew). Tinnock. Pedn-paly, or Pridden pral — i.e. Tree ba,bbler (West Corn- wall). Pinchem (Beds). Tidife. 4. Various names. Tomtit (General). ■Jenny tit (Suffolk). Nun. From the white fillet round its head. Cf. Nanette (Prance), Amitak (Guernsey). AUecampagne (Cornwall). Bee bird (Hants). Because it is supposed to stand at the entrance o£ the hives and destroy the bees as they come out. Cf. Crojite afieiBc (Francs) . Billy biter (Salop ; North Kiding).. Because the female, while sitting on her eggs, does not hesitate to peck the fingers of those who try to remove her. Pickcheese (Norfolk). Tomnouf (Salop). Jenny wren (Craven). Ox-eye (East Lothian). See under Great Tit. Stone chat (Ireland). Because its nest is usually in the hole of a wall or tree. 5. "Weather prognostic. " The titmouse foretells cold when crying, Piucher." (Wilsfor4, " Nature's Secrets," p. 132.) Family Sittid^e. G&nus SiTTA. NUTHATCH— i.e. Nut Hacker {Sitta ccesia). So called from the bird's habit of striking and splitting with its beak filberts or hazel nuts ; whence also Niit topper — i.e. Nut tapper. Nutcracker (Salop). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 35 Woodcracker. Jobbin (Northants). ' Nutjobber (Berks). "Job"=to strike with a pointed instrument (Gael. (ro5=abeak). If the opening of the hole in which ia it9 nest be too large, the bird lessens it by plastering the sides with mud ; hence it ia known in Hampshire as the Mud- stopper. Cf. Ma^on, Picma^on (Lorraine). Family Troglodytid^. Geniis Troglodytes. WREN {Troglodytes parvulus). A.-S. Wrenna; whenciB 1. Wranny (Cornwall). Wrsinnock (Orkney Isles). 2. From its short bob-tail it has the names of Cutty or Cut (Dorset ; Devon ; Hants j Pembroke). From Welsh Ovit, a short tail. Scutty (Sussex). Cutteley wren (Somerset). Bobby wren (Norfolk). 3. From its diminutive size it is called Tiddy or Tidley wren (Essex). Tom tit (Norfolk ; Craven). Titty todger (Devon); 4. Familiar names. Kitty, Jenny (Greneral). Jennie crudle. Tintie (Notts). Sally (Ireland). 5. Various names. Stag, Tope (Norfolk ; Cornwall). Crackil (North Devon). From its cry. Cf. Crac-jcm (St. Lo). Eobui redbreast (Shetland Isles). Our Lady's hen (Old Scotch). ' ' Malisons, malisons, mair than ten. That harry- our Lady of Heaven's hen ! " Cf. Poulate de Dim, Oiseau deDieu, (Nbrmandy), titles given by the French peasants to the wren, because, so they say, she was present at the birth of the 36 PBOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Infant Saviour, made her nest in Hia cradle, and brought moss and feathers to form a coverlet for the Holy Child. (" Laisnel de la Salle," ii. 249.) i 6. Folk lore of the wren. (1) The wren as king of birds. The tradition of the sovereignty of the wren over the _ feathered race is widely spread. Hence we find the Latin name for the bird to be Segvins, the. Greek ^aaiXiffKos, the French JRoitelet, Roi des oiseaux. Hoi de froi'dwe, Jtoi de guille, Roi 'Bertaud, the Spanish Reyezvdo, the Italian Reatino or Re di mpe (kfng of the hedge), the Swedish Kimgs fogel, "the Danish Fitgle Konge or File Konge (alder king), the German Zaunhmig (hedge king), Schneekbnig Chm-us : Sing overem, etc. 38 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. On Christmas Day I turned the spit, I burned my fingers, I feel it yet : Between my finger and my thumb I eat the roast meat every srumb. Chorus : Sing overem, etc. We were all day hunting the Wren, We were all day hunting the Wren ; The Wren so cute, and we so cunning, He stayed in the bush while we w,ere running. Chorus: Sing overem, etc. When we went to cut the holly , All our boys were brisk and jolly ; We cut it down all in a trice. Which made our Wren boys to rejoice. Chorus ; Sing overem, etc." The last three vei-ses are pecuhar to Waterford. Mr Thompson tells us that this custom has been dramatisfed. "It was lately (Sept. 1848) posted on the walls of Belfast, as about to be performed at .one of the minor theatres. Having a desire to see t he nature of the piece, the manager's copy was kindly placed at my service. The title is " The Wren Boys : or the Moment of Peril ; an original drama, in two acts. By Thomas^ Egerton Wilks, Esq. . . . Author of etc. , etc. As performed in the London Theatres. " In Act II., Sc. i. is the village of Shanagolden, in Munster. The wren boys enter confusedly, one bearing a bush v^ith a wren in i,t ; and the first four lines, nearly as above given (Mr. Croker's version), are sung, followed by chorus." It may be observed that Mr. Croker noti?ed the subject in ^ communication made to the British Archseological Association on Feb. 4th, 1848, in connection with a proclamation by Richard Dowden,, Mayor of Cork, issued at the close of 1845, with the intention, as headed, to "prevent cruelty to animals." The old .popular ceremony long -prevalent in Ireland, of hunting and killing a wren on St. Stephen's day, was then forbidden, but still lingers in some parts of Connaught. With regard to the origin of the custom,' of whict I shall speak later on (jf), there are several traditions current in Ireland. One story giving the reason is : " St. Stephen when being broughf to execution was escaping from his sleeping jailors, when a wren flew on' the face of one of them and woke him." This would account for his being killed on St. Stephen's day. Another version is that our Saviour was hiding in the garden, and a wren, by noisy :- chirping, showed the place to the soldiers and servants of the high priest;-- Another legend is : "A wren at the siege of Doolinn, by hopping on a drum, woke up the Danes and prevented them being surprised " {Polk-iore Record, p. 108, " Notes on- Irish Folk Lore"). A newer version relates that on one occasion James II.'s forces were on the point of surprising King William's- army early in the morning, when some wrens, attracted probably by the frag- ments of the preceding night's repast,, alighted on the head of a drum which had served for a table, and the noise of their bills in the act of picking awoke the drummer, who instantly beat to arms and saved William's arniy from defeat. The wren, accordingly, has ever since been a prime favourite with the Orangft party, and an object of persecution to the friends of James. PROVINCIAL NAMES 01' BRITISH BIRDS. 39 5. In the Isle of Man. Mr. Train, in his "Account of the Isle of Man" (Douglas, 1845), vol. ii., pp. 124-7, says that on St. Stephen's Day a group of boys go from door to door with a wren suspended by the legs in the centre 6f two hoops crossing each other at right angles, decorated with evergreens and ribands, singing lines called " Hunt the Wren " :— " We hunted the wren for Robin the Bobbin, We hunted the wren for Jack of the Can ; We hunted the wren for Robin the Bobbin, We hunted the ^en for every one." If, at the close of this rhyme, they are fortunate enough to obtain a small coin, they give in return a feather of the wren ; and before the close of the day • the bird may be sometimes seen hanging almost featherless. It is then taken to the sea-shore or some piece of waste ground, and • solemnly interred. In the previous century, as it appears from Waldron's "Description of the Isle of Man," p. 155, the hunting took place on December 24th, and the wren was buried in the churchyard, the feathers being religiously preserved, as each of them was believed to be an effectual preservative from shipwreck for one year. Mr. Train also gives the following tradition as to the origin of the ceremony : " In former times a fairy of uncommon beauty exerted such undue influence over the male population, that she, at various times, induced by her sweet voice numbers to follow her footsteps, till by degrees she led them into the sea, where they perished. This barbarous exercise of power had continued for a great length of time, till it was apprehended that the island - would be ~ exhausted of its defenders ; when a knight-errant sprang up, who discovered some means of countervailing the charms used by this siren, and even laid a plot for her destruction, which she only escaped at the moment of extreme hazard by taking the form of a wren. But,, though she evaded instant annihilation, a spell was cast upon her by which she was condemned to re-animate the same form every succeeding New Tear's Day, until she should perish by a human hand." In consequence of this legend every man and boy in the island devotes the hours from the rising to the setting of the sun on each returning anni- versary to the hope of extirpating the fairy ; the wren's feathers, as already observed^ being considered as a charm against shipwreck. With (reference to this latter ■ beUef MacTaggart writes in the " Scottish Gallovidian Encyclo- psedia," p. 157, that Manx, herring-fishers dare not go to sea without one of these birds taken dead with them, for fear of disasters and storms. Their tradition is of a sea sprite that hunted the herring tack, attended always by storms ; and at last it assumed the figure of a wren and flew away» So they think that when they have a dead wren with them all is snug. Another version of the above legend relates that the enchantress set out on her milk-white ' palfrey, accompanied by her admirers on foot, till, having led them into a deep river, she 'drowned six hundred of the best men the island had ever seen, and then flew away in the shape of a bat. To prevent the recurrence of a like disaster it was ordained that the women should henceforth go on foot and follow the men, which custom is so religiously observed, that if by chance a woman is observed walking before a man, whoever sees her cries out immedi- atelv, " Tehi 1 Tehi I " which, it seems, was the name of the enchantress whp occasioned this law. (Waldron, p. 188.) In a MS. account of Manx' customs the wren song is given as follows. I premise by stating that each line is repeated four timep, in the same manner as the first and last are : — " ' We'U away to the woods,' says Robin the Bobbin, ' We'll away to the woods,' says Richard the Robin, ' We'll away to the woods,' says Jackey the Land, ' We'U away to the woods,' says every one-. 40 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. What will we do there ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' We'll hunt the wren,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. • Where is he ? where is he ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' In yonder green bush,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' How can we get him down ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' With sticks and stones,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' He's down, he's down,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' How can we get hiiu home ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' We'll hire a cart,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' Whose cart shall we hire ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' Johnny Bill Fell's,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc, ' How can we get him in ? ' says Robip the Bobbin, etc. ' With iron bars,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' He's at home, he's at home,' says Robin the bobbin, etc. , ' How will we get him boiled ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. . ' On the brewery pan,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' How will we get him eaten ? ' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' With knives and forks,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' Who's to dine at the feast ? ' says. Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' The king and the queen,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' The pluck for the poor,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' The legs for the lame,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' The bones for tte dogs,' says Robin the Bobbin, etc. ' He's eaten, he's eaten,' says Robin the Bobbin, ' He's eaten, he's eaten,' says Richard the Robbin, ' He's eaten, he's eaten,' says Jackey the Land, ' He's eaten, he's eaten,' says every one." A somewhat similar song is to be found in David Herd's " Collection of Ancient and Modern Scottish Songs, Heroic Ballads, etc." ■ Edinburgh, 1776. (repr. Glasgow, 1869, vol. ii., p. 210) :— " ' Will ye go to the wood ? ' quo' Fozie Mosie ; ' Will ye go to the wood ? ' quo' Johnnie Rednosie ; ' Will ye go to the wood ? ' quo' Foslin 'ene ; ' Will ye go to the wood ? ' quo' brither and kih. ' ' What to do there ? ' quo' Fozie Mosie, etc. 'To slay the wren,' quo' Fozie Mozie, etc. ' What way will ye get her hame ? ' quo' Fozie Mozie, etc. ' We'll hire cart and horse,' quo' Fozie Mozie, etc. ' What way wiU ye get her in ? ' quo' Fozie Mozie, etc. 'We'll drive down the door cheeks,' quo' Fozie Mozie, etc. 'ril hae a vdng,' quo' Fozie Mozie ; 'I'll hae anither,' quo' Johnnie Rednosie ; 'I'll hae a leg,' quo' Foslin 'ene ; • 'And I'll hae anither,' quo' brither and kin." c. In Pembrokeshire. _ Mr. Halliwell says, in his " Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales," p. 165, that m this coimty it is customary on .Twelfth Day to carry about a wren, termed the .Kmg, enclosed in a box with glass windows, surmounted by a wheel, from which are appended various coloured ribands. It is attended by men and boys, who visit the fannhouses and sing a song, the following fragments of which are all that have come under my observatidn : — " For we are come here To taste your good cheer. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 41 And the King is well dressed In silks of the hest. He is from a cottager's stall To a fine gilded hall." He adds that tradition connects the ceremony with the de5,th of an ancient British king at the time of the Saxon invasion. The following are two other wren songs from the same county ; contributed by Mr. J. Tombs to Notes and Queries, Ser. III., v. 109, 110. " Joy, health, love and peace. Be to you in this place. By your leave we will sing Concerning our King : Our King, is well drest In silks of the best ; With his ribbons so rare No king can compare. In his coach he does ride With a great deal of pride : And with four footmen To wait upon him : We were four at watch, And all nigh of a match : And with powder and ball We fired at his hall. We have traveU'd many miles Over hedges and stiles. To find you this King, Which we now to you bring. Now Christmas is past, TweKth Day is the last, Th' Old Year bids adieu — Great joy to the New." In the sixteenth line of the song, " hall " is used for the wren's nest, as in the preceding fragment quoted by Mr. HalUwell ; and fitly so, for it is a hall or covered place. And it is from the shape of his nest that the wren gets his name, meaning covered. Of the second song only two verses are given, viz. : — , Hi WTiere su-e you going ? ' says the milder to the malder : ' Where are you going ? ' says the younger to the elder : ' I cannot tell,' says Rzzledyfose ; ' To catch Cutty Wren,' says John-the;red-nose. ' How will you get him ? ' says the milder to the malder ; ' How will you get him ? ' says the younger to the elder ; ' I cannot tell,' says Fizzledyfose ; ' With guns and great cannons,' says John-the-red-nose." It is believed that this, which bears a striking resemblance to the Manx versions (see above, 5), used to be sung when the party was setting out to .search for the wren which they wanted for the Twelfth Naght. Mr. Sikes, in Ms most interesting work "British Goblins," gives the music of the above song, adding that the ballad was a very long one. d. In Derbyshire. In Derbyshire hunting wrens on Sunday is caUed "jent}/ " {i.e. Jenny) hwnting. - 42 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. c. In Essex. . , Mr. Henderson, in Ha Folklore of the Northern Counties/' p. 125,- says that at Christmas-tide boys are accustomed to kill wrens and ,carry them about in furze bushes from house to house, asking a present, and singing the verse — "The wren, the wren, the king of the birds," etc. /. In France. The inhabitants of the tbwn of Ciotat, near Marseilles, so Sonnini tells us (" Travels," vol. i., p. 16), armed with swords and pistols, commence an anni- versary hunting of the wren at the beginning of Nivose (which oommenoid on the 23rd of. December). When one is captured, it is suspended, as if a heavy burden, from the middle of a long pole, borne on the shoulders of two men, carried in procession through the streets, and weighed on a great pair of scales, after which there is a convivial entertainment. The name given to the ' bird is as curious as the festival. They call it the Polecat, or Ph-e~ de la- ikasse (Father of the Woodcock), on account of the resemblance of its plumage to that of the woodcock, supposed by them to be engendered by the polecat. At Carcassonne (Dept. Aude) the wren is carried about by the young people of the place,- on the last day of December, the hunting of the bird having taken place on the first Sunday of the month, when the youth by whom it is caught, or killed, is dignified by the title of, King. On Twelfth Day the town is again paraded, the Wren being borne solemnly upon a staff adorned with a garland of olive, oak, and mistletoe. A somewhat similar custom prevailed at Chateau Ponsao, in Berry, where the inhabitants, on New Year's Day, brought a wren in solenin procession to the Prior, as their . seignorial lord, in token of their fealty. It is remarkable that, according^ to M. Michelet (" Origines du Droit Franfais," p. 250), the same usage was. practised in Franconia. !/. This custom is undoubtedly sacrificial in its origin, the wren, as a lightning bird, being sacred to Donar, the lightning god. The time also of its' celebration — viz., at the commencement and end of the first twelve nights of the sun's. , return from the winter solstice — points in the same direction. Moreover, in North Germany the squirrel is hunted at Easter (Wolf, " Beitrage," i. 78) j and Simcock ("D. M." 555) tells us that in some parts of the same country a dead fox is carried abput by the village boys at Midsummer^ Bpth these animals, from their red colour, were under the protection of the same deity. (For Norman and Breton legends of the wren as a fire bringer, sea under Strigidse, p. 124.) A variation of these, communicated to M. RoUand from the Dept. of the Loiret, was as follows : — The wreii, having succeeded in obtaining the coveted fire, sets off on her downward flight to earth ; but alas ! her wings began to bum, and she was obliged to intrust her precious burden to the care of the robin, whose plumage also burst into flames, and who bears the traces on his breast. The lark then came to the rescue, and brought the prize in safety to mankind for their use. In some parts of Brittany they, say that the vn-en fetched fire from hell, and got her feathers scorched as she passed through the keyhole. Hence it is that the wren, alike with the robin and the swallow, is a sacred bird, and to rob its nest is an act to be regarded with horror. In the Pays de Caux such a crime. is believed to be punished by the destruction of the culprit's dwelling by lightning ; and in Touraine it is popularly supposed that the fingers of the man who kUls a wren will gradually shrivel away and finally drop off ! , (3) The wren in saintly legends. S. Calasius, while at work in his vineyard, being overcome by the heat, took his frock off and hung it on the branch of a neighbouring tree. Judge of his PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS, 43' amazement at seeing a wren fly into its folds and lay an egg ! The "saint was so delighted that he spent the night in prayer and thanksgiving to God. In the life of S. Malo a similar occurrence is related, with this differ- ence — that he allowed the bird to remain undisturbed , tUl the eggs were hatched. * . S. Dol, seeing that his fellow monks were disturbed at their devotions by the crying and screeching of the numerous birds in the woods contiguous to the lAcsnastery, collected them all together in the convent yard, imposed silence upon th6m, and dismissed them, a.t the same time forbidding them to return. , An exception was made in favour of the wrens, whose presence cheered without distracting the inmates. (A. de Pouthieu, " Les FStes l^gendaires.'') (For the robin and wren as man and wife, see above, under "Robin,'' 5 /, p. 18.) (4) Omens drawn from the wren. In a work entitled " A SaUor Boy's Experience " (Hamilton, 1867), it is stated that, in that neighbourhood, previous to setting out on their voyage, the sailors catch a wren and pluck some feathers from it, tossing them up in the air, when, according as they fall or are carried away by the wind, the success of the herring fishery is prognosticated. (^Zoologist, 1094.) Family MoiacillidyE. Genus Motacilla. PIED WAGTAIL {Motacilla lugiMiris). 1. From the habit of jerking their t3,ils while running, and also when alighting after a Short flight, this family of birds derive their names of WagtaU. Cf. Boehequeue (France), Goditremola (Naples). Quaketail. Waggie (East Lothian). Nannie wagtail (Notts). ^ Willie wagtail (Orkney Isles). 2. From its habit of frequenting ponds and streams the pied wagtail is also called Water wagtail (a name applied to each species). Wattie wagtail. Waterie (Forfar). Wattie (Westmoreland). • 3. " From the fanciful similarity between the beating of the water with its tail by the bird while tripping g-long the leaves of a water lily, and the beating in the water by washerwomen" 44 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. (Johns' " British Birds in their Haunts," 171), it has received the titles of Dishwasher (Berks, Bucks, Oxfordshire ; Craven ; Salop). Moll washer. Peggy dishwasher (Kent). MoUy washdish (Hants ; Somerset). Polly washdish (Dorset). Nanny washtail. Dishlick (West Cornwall). Washerwoman. Cf. Batte lessive ; Zavandiere (Prance). 4. Various names. Seed lady (Peebles). Because they begin to appear in the north about the beginning of March. •(See under Grey Wagtail.) Devil's bird, or Deviling (Ireland). From the constant uncanny motion of its tail. White wagtail. 5._In Dorset the tajjping of a water wagtail with its bUl at a window is ■considered as a sign of approaching death. , GREY WAGTAIL {Motacilla melanope). Also called Winter wagtail (South of England). So called because it comes in autumn and retires northward in spring. Barley seed bird (Yorkshire). Oat seed bird (ditto). Because it makes its appearance in the north of England about March, and is then most abundant in those elevated parts of the county which are better adapted for the growth of oats than of wheat. Yellow wagtail (East Lothian ; Ireland). From the bright yellow of its neck and breast. YELLOW WAGTAIL {Motadlla Rail). 1. So called from the light yellow hue of its neck and lower parts, whence also Yellow waggie. Yellow Molly (Hants). 2^ Prom its constant attendance on cattle, feeding on the PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS, 45 insects ttey disturb from the ground by their movements, it receives the names of Cow bird. Cow Moot, or Cow klit. Cf . Bergere ; Vachette (France), Bovarina (Piedmont), Kuhstelze (Bavaria). 3. Various names. Waterie wagtail (Aberdeen). Spring, or Summer wagtail (North)^ Because it is a summer visitor, going southwards in the early autuinn. Called by the Spaniards Pepita, a name denoting " something exquisitely feminine and graceful " ; and Bala/rina {i.e. dancing girl) in the neighbourhood of Mentone, for the same reason. Genus Anthus. MEADOW PIPIT {Anthus pratensis). 1. Called Pipit from its short and feeble note"; whence also Titling, or Tit (General). Tietick (Shetland Isles). Cf. Tiii (Anjou). Titlark. Cheeper. Peep (Forfar). Teetan (Orkney Isles). Wekeen (Kerry). 2. As opposed to the Tree pipit, which frequents wooded districts, . it is caUed Meadow titling. Meadow lark (Hants). Field titling. Earth titling (East Lothian). 3. From its attachment to commons and waste lands it has received the names of Moss cheeper (Scotland). Moss cheepuck (North Ireland). Heather Untie (Cumberland ; Westmoreland). Ling bird (Cumberland ; West Riding). Moor titling (Craven). Moor tabling (ditto). Moor tit. 46 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 4. Also called Cuckoo's Sandie, or Cuckoo's titling (Durham). Because it is the cuckoo's constant companion. With reference to this habit ■of the bird, Mr. Fitzgerald states, in "Long Ago," p. 81, that in Ireland the charitable wish is heard, if two people are quarrelling, "May you never hear ~ the cuckoo or the little bird that follows it." It is there believed that " the latter is ever trying to get into the cuckoo's mouth, and if this should once happen, the end of the world would come." The small size of the titling con- trasted with that of its companion gave rise to the proverbs, " Like the cuckoo and the titlark," or " Like the. gowk and the titling," applied to one who follows another, as the jackal the lion. "Many an old applewoman at the fairs," says Gait, in "Sir Andrew Wylie," " on seeing the gowk and the titling approach (as two boys were called), watched their tempting piles of toys and delectables. "with gleg een' and staff grasped to repel some pawkie aggression. " Hill sparrow (Orkney and Shetland Isles). The Gaelic name is Glasian {i.e. grey bird). TREE PIPIT {Anthus trivialis). Various names. Pipit lark. * Tree lark. lit lark (incorrectly). Grasshopper lark (incorrectly). Short-heeled field lark (Scotland). So called because the claw of the hind toe is not so long as the toe itself. Field lark. ROCK PIPIT {Anthus obscurus). 1. So called from being confined exclusively to the sea shore ; •whence also-r- Eock lark. Sea titling, or sea lark. Sea lintie (East Lothian). Rock lintie (Aberdeen). Gutter teetan (Orkney Isles). Shore teetan (ditto). Tang sparrow (Shetland Isles). ^(js»ijf= seaweed. 2. Various names. Teetuck, or Teetan (Shetland Isles). Prom its cry. Dusky lark. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 47 FqanUy Laniib^e. O&nMS Lanius. GREAT GREY SHRIKE (Lanius excubitor). !From Icel. shrikja, a shrike, lit. " shrieker." " Called ' excubitor,' or watchman, because fowlers in Prance fasten it close to tlie living bird which they use as a lure. When the shrike sees the hawk it utters a shrill cry of terror, and thus gives notice of its enemy's approach, enabling the fowler to draw the string of the net and enclose the falcon, before the latter ^as time to carry off the bait." (YarreU.) Butcher bird. So called because it impales beetles and small birds on thorns, for the purpose of pulling them to pieces. Of. Boucher (Jura). White wisky John. From the pure white under plumage and ashen grey head and back, and wavering character of its. flight. Murdering pie. From the similarity in colour of its plumage to that of the magpie. Mattages. . Old obsolete name, given by falconers, and perhaps equivalent to preceding. Cf. Ma£dgasse (Alpes) — from Materr—tiier (from macta/re), sud agache or ffl5ras3e= magpie. See under Magpie, 1. M. EoUand thinks that the shrike is so called because it frequently attacks and overcomes the magpie. RED-BACKED SHRIKE {Lcmiua colhirio). 1'. From its cruelty and voracity this bird is called Butcher bird (General). See under preceding. Murdering bird. Ifine killer. " From a notion that it always kills and impales nine creatures before it begins its meal " (Wood). ' Cf. NeuntodUr (Germany). Weirangle, or Wariangle (Yorkshire). Cf. Wiirgengd (Germany), i.e. 'Worrying or Destroying angel ' ; called also Wwrger; or ' Worrier, throttler.' 2. Various names. Jack baker (Hants ; Surrey ; Sussex). French magpie (Sussex). Pope (Hants). Cuckoo's maid (Hereford). Because it feeds the young cuckoo. ' 48 PBOVINCIAL NAMES OF BKITISH BIKDS. Masher or Muster (Cornwall). From the ruddy colour of its plumage ; or perhaps i.j. Flesher, i.e. butcher. 3. It is believed in the arrondissement of La Chitre that the shrike brought to the Roman soldiers the thorns with which our Lord was crowned; for which reason, whenever a peasant boy catches one of these birds, he applies to it the lex talionis, and sticks thorns into its head and neck. (Laisnel de la Salle, ii. 242.) Family AMPELiDiE. Genus Ampelis. WAXWING {Ampelis garruhis). Bohemian chatterer. In German Switzerland the country-people give this bird the names of Pest, and Sterhe-vogd {i.e. Pest, or Death-bird) ; and say that the waxwing is only seen in their country every seven years, and that war, pestilence, and famine are inseparable from its visits. (Schinz, " Fauna Helvetica.") Family Muscicapid^. Genus Muscicapa. SPOTTED FLYCATCHER {Muscicapa grisola). Of, Gohe-mouche (France) ; Flieg'enschnappe (Germany). 1. From the site of its nest, which is generally placed against a wall, or on a beam or rafter of an outbuilding, this bird is calted Wall, or Beam bird (Berks ; Bucks j East Anglia ; Hants). Eafter or Eafter bird. Wall-plat (Devon). "Plat" — a flat beam lying on the top of a wall. 2. From the white colour of the under parts it has the names White wall (Northants). White baker. 3. Various names. Cobweb (Northants): From its use of spiders' webs in the construction of its nest.. So in France it is called L'araigne or Viraigne. Post bird (Kent). From its habit of perching on a po3t, watching for flies. PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIEDS. ' 49 Bee bird (Norfolk). From its fondness for bees. Chancider. Chait (Worcestershire). From its note. Cherry sucker ; Cherry chopper ; Cherry snipe. Names given to the flycatolier from its being so often seen on, or flying rovmd, cherry trees : the many insects that feed on them being the attraction. 4. In Somerset these birds are supposed to bring good luck to the homestead they frequent, hence the rhyme : — " If you scare the fly-catcher away, No good luck wiU with you stay." In Salop the namei of Miller is given to young flycatchers. PIED FLYCATCHER {Muscic'apa atricapilla). Cold or Cole finch (Northumberland; Cumberland; West- moreland). Section Oscines Latirostees. Fmnily Hibundinid^. Genua Hikundo. WALLOW XSirundo rustim). A.-S. Swawe. 1. It is a common saying that the low flight of swallows is a sign of rain, not only in our own country, but in France, where they say: — " Quind ch& arondelles volent b. terre Adiu la pouBsifere." and in North Italy : — " Le rundane che ula a bass L'fe segnald'un gran slaaas." Hence G-ray writes in his first Pastoral : — ; " When swallows fleet soar high and sport in air. He told us that the welkin would be clear." 2. The swallow is universally considered as the herald of spring and summer. Among the Greeks a festival was observed in honour of this bird, and at Rhodes the children were accustomed to go from house to house carrying with them young swallows 4 50 PEOVmCIAL' NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. and singing a swallow song, which has been handed down by Athenffius, and thus rendered into English : — "He comes ! he comes ! who. loves to hear Soft sunny hours, and seasons fair : The swaljow hither comes to rest His sable wing and snowy breast." Even at the present day, says Grimm ("D.M.," 723), does the usage prevail in Greece. On the 1st of March bands of boys and girls parade the streets, singing ballads and carrying a pole surmounted by the image of a swallow carved in wood. In England the first swallows arrive about the 11th of April, and are succeeded by .others at intervals, until the middle or end of May. The Russian peasants, in their springtide calendar (Ealston's " Songs of the Russian People," p., 213), believe that on the 25th of March the swallow comes flying from Paradise, and brings with it warmth to the earth. The same day the Festival of the Annunciation is noted in South Germany, by the saying, " Our Lady's Annunciation brings back the swallows " ; while in Mecklenburg, St. George's day, April 23rd, marks their appearance. The country people about Bergamd, observing them at an earlier date, have the following proverbs with regard to the date of their return ; — a. " A sau Gregorie Papa ' Le rundane le passa I'aoqua," — i.e., ' on the Festival of St. Gregory the Pope (March 12th), the swallow crosses the water (i.e. arrives in Europe).' • i. • " Per san Giusep le rimdaue le passa 1 tfeo : Passa o no passa, el f rM el ne lassa," — i.e., ' on St. Joseph's Day (March 19th), the swallows fly over the roofs ; whether they fly or not, the cold weather has gone.' c, " Per san Beaedfet Ve la rundana sota 1 t^c," — i.e., ' on St. Benedict's Day (March 21st), the swallow flies over the roofs.' d. The French say of their appearance, " A I'Annoriciation (March 25th), Les hirondelles viennent annonoeir la belle saison " ; and of their departure, "A la Nativity (Sept. 8th), Elles nous, quittent avec \'4t6," — which corresponds with the North German proverb : — " Urn Mariii Geburt Ziehn die Schwalbe fort." In Saxony they are supposed to arrive on Palm Sunday and to leave on Sept. 14th (popularly called Crucis, the Festival o^ the Exaltation of the Cross) ; while the Russians believe that they hide or bury themselves in wells on Simeon's day (Sept. 1st) ; and in Haute Bretagne the peasants say that they always arrive before Maundy Thul-sday, in order to be present at the commemoration of the Saviour's crucifixion. PBOVINOIAL NAMES OF BKITISH BIRDS. 51 3. Hibernation of swallows. The fact of the migration of swallows was by ncr means considered as such oy the old naturalists. Olaus Magnus, in the nineteenth book of his " History of the Northern Nations," gives the following information on the subject :— Although the writers of many natural things have recorded that the swallows change their stations, going, when winter cometh, into hotter countries ; yet, m the northern waters, fishermen oftentimes by chance draw up in their nets an abundance of swallows^ hanging together like a conglomerated mass." He adds also, that " in the beginning of autumn they assemble together among the reeds ; where, allowing themselves to sink into the water, they join bill to bill, vring to wing, and foot to foot." Swan, in his "Speculum Mundi," p. 400, noticing this account, is rather incredulous, but qualifies his doubts by asking, " Why may it not be as well as the Barnacle or Bean Geese ? of which it is certain that they first grow on trees." 4. Folk lore of the swallow. (1) The swallow stone. To the swallow is attributed, by popular belief, the power of finding a stone endued with wondrous properties. " In Normandy,"' says Mr. Baring Gould ("Myths of the Middle Ages," Ser. II., p. 133), quoting from Mile Bosquet's " Norpiandie Pittoresque," "the swallow knows how to find upon the sea-beach a pebble which has the marvellous power of restoring sight to the blind. The peasants teU of a certain way of obtaining possession of this stone. You must ptit out the eyes of a swallow's young, whereupon the mother-bird wiU imme- diately go in quest of the stone. When she has found it and applied it, she wiU endeavour to make away with the talisman, that none may discover it. But if one has taken the precaution to spread a piece of scarlet cloth below the nest, the swallow, mistaking it for fife, will drop the stone upon it." Tlys tradition is analogous to that concerning the woodpecker and the springwort (see mfra., p. 101), and is quite sufficient to enable us to class the swallow as a fire-bringing bird. Longfellow alludes to it in " Evangeline " : — " Oft in the barns they climbed to the populous nests in the rafters, -_ Seeking with eager eyes that wondrous stone which the swallow Brings from the shore of the sea to restore the sight of its fledglings ; Lucky was he who found that stone in the nest of the swallow ! " Sere the stone lies in the nest ; and this agrees with the communication made to the Zoologist for 1866, p. 523, by Dr. Lebour. who says : " I met last summer, in Brittany, with a curious fact relating to the habits of the common house swallow. In Brittany there exists a wide-spread beUef among the peasantry that certain stones found in swallows' nests are sovereign cures for certain diseases of the eye. These stones are held in high estimation, and the happy possessor usually lets them on hire at a sou or so a day. Now, I had the good fortune to see some of these swallow stones, and to examine them. I found them to be the hard polished calcareous opercula of some species of Turbo, and although their worn state precludes the idea of identifying the species, yet I am confident that they belong to no European Tv/rho. The largest I have seen was three-eighths of an inch long and a quarter of an inch broad ; one side is flat, or nearly so, and the other is convex, more or less so in different specimens. Their peculiar shape enables one to push them under the eyelid across the eyeball, and thiis they remove any eyelash or other foreign substance which may have got in one's eye ; further than this, they have no curing power ; the peasants, however,- believe they are omnipotent. The presence of these opercula in swallows' nests is very curious, and leads one to suppose that they must have been brought there from some distant shore in the swallow's stomach." This was the idea of Pliny, Albertus Magnus, Avicen, and 52 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. others, who taught that the stone in question, which they called Ohelidonms, was to be discovered in the belly of the eldest of a brood of young birds, if searched for before or at the August full moon. Then, being tied to the arm or hung round the neck, it was a remedy against epilepsy. In Tyrol it is believed that, this stone is deposited in his nest by the swallow after a regular use of the same abode for seven consecutive years. The following description of the swallow-stone is given by Beurard, in his " German-French Dictionary of Mining Terms " (Paris, 1819) — ■" Schwalben- stein = Pierre d'hii-ondelle : sortes de petites pierres siliceuses, de forme sph^riqlie ou arrondie, qui ont aussi port^ les noms de pierres de sassenage, pierres optal- miques, de fausses ch^lidoniennes, et enfin de chfloniies, et que Ton a pr^tendu, se trouver dans le ventre des jeunes hirondelles, mais qui ne sont autre chose que des grains de quartz pyromaque ou de qnaxtz agate roulfe par les eau'x, oe qui leur a fait prendre la forme ovoide." (2) a. Celandine, or swallow's herb. Besides possessing a stone which could cure blindness, swallows, according to old authors, taught men the healing properties of the celandine, by employing* it for the same purpose. This herb was so nam«d either because (Plin., " Hist. An." XXV. 8) it flowered at the coming of the swallows and withered at their departure, or because (Plin. viii. 27) when the eyes of their young ones were out, they cured them again with it. So Chester (" Love's Martyr," p. 122) writes of "The artificial! nest-composing swallow * * * * His yong ones being hurt within the eies He helps them, with the herb ealcedonies." h. Another property of this^herb is mentioned by Leoprechting ("Aus dem Leeha'ain"). — If you can get some swallow's eggs, unseen by the parents, boil them hard and replace them in the nest, you majf then obtain possession , of a certain herb which the old birds fetch to make them soft again, and which, if carried in the pocket, ensures always the possession of money. (3) The heart of the swallow, worn round the neck, was supposed to render the wearer attractive : it was good also for strengthening the memory': while the present to a lady of a gold ring which had lain in a swaUow's nest nine days engendered love for the donor in her breast. (" Albuih des Chasseurs," 1823.) 5. The superstitions and legeni^s respecting the swallow present the bird in a twofold aspect — either as honoured, cherished and reverenced, or as dreaded and abused. I propose to consider each in turn. (1) Generally speaking, from its familiar and domestic habits, and when regarded as the herald of spring, the swallow is looked upon as a propitious bird, and respected accordingly. In France it has the names of Poule de Dim, and "Messenger of Life " ; in Germany, of Marienschvialbe and Herrgottsvogd ; in Sardinia, Pillcmi de Swnta Zucia ; while the Arabians call it the " Bird of Jesus" (Labrosse, , " Gazophylacium Linguae Persarum," 1684, p. 356), and the "Bird of Paradise," because to it alone are open the gates of Eden, closed against every other living thing. Our own country-people couple the swallow and the martin . with the robin and the wren as sacred birds in the adages — " The robin and the wren Are God Almighty's ccck and hen ; The martin and the swallow Are the two next birds that follow.'' PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 53 There are variations of the last-line : e.g. — " Are God Almighty's shirt and collar," [Essex,] or, " Are God Almighty's bow and arrow," [Northants, ] or, "Are God Almighty's mate and marrow " (i.e. companions,) [A Cheshire version, or, " Are God Almighty's birds to hollow ' ' — " where," says Mr. Halliwell, " the word hollow is most probably a corruption of the verb hallow, to keep holy." (2) Nothing can bring better luck to a house and its inmates than for swallows to build their nests round it ; or, on the other hand, be a worse omen than, for the nests to be forsaken. Terrible penalties are paid by the rash hand that destroys or robs a swallow's nest. Rain will continuously descend on his crops for a month, or his cows will cease to give milk, or else give it mixed with blood (North Riding) ; or death, or some great calamity, will fall upon his family (Scotland, Sussex, East Riding). Mr. Henderson .(" Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties," p. 122) gives the following instance of the last belief. " A farmer's wife near Hull told a friend of mine, Mrs. L , how some young men, sons of a banker in that tovrn, had pulled down all the swallows' nests about a little farm which he possessed. ' The bank broke soon after,' she went on, ' and, poor things, the family have had nought but trouble since ! ' " All these and many more superstitions are current in Germany, where, particularly in Tyrol, the swaJlow is especially held to be sacred : e.g., the despoiler's house will be destroyed by lightning, or his village will decline in prosperity. In Franche Comt^ it is held that if a swallow's nest be removed one of the animals in the stable will fall lame before the year is out (Monnier, " Trad. Pop.," p. 156) ; and throughout France the same immunity from annoyance is granted them, except at Aries, wKere they are shot right and left. (3) The first sight of a swallow (like the first note of a cuckoo) i^ a matter of no small importance among the German peasants. In Westphalia, when a man sees the first swallow, he should look if there be a hair under his foot. If he find one, his future wife's hair will be of the same colour. (Kelly, p. 102.) In Bohemia, if one swallow be seen by a maiden, she will be married during the year ; if a pair first meet her eye, she will remain single. The sight of a sitting swallow is accounted fortunate, of one on the wing the reverse. (Wuttke, " Volksaberglaube," p. 190.) In the Mark it is necessary to wash the face immediately after the first swallow has been seen, otherwise one must expect to be sunburnt and freckled during the year (Busoh). (4) There are several sacred legends in which the swallow figures, some of which are worth noticing. a. When our Saviour was crucified, a little bird came and perched upon the cross, peered sorrowfully down upon the Sufferer, and twittered, " Hugsvala, svala, svala, Honom !" i.e.. " Console, console, console Him," and hence it obtained the name of Sla. (Norway.) This resembles the Russian story of the swallows and sparrows (see p. 61). h. It was the swallow who removed the crown of thorns from our Saviour's head while hanging on the cross; In her efforts the sharp spines pierced her breast ; hence its ruddy colour. (La Rochelle.) The same is related of the robin and crossbill. (See under ejaoh.) V. One day, while pursued by the Jews, our Lord took refuge in a pleasant wood where He seated Himself on the grass, tired by His long and hasty 64 PKOVINOIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIEDS. flight. After a little time some magpies, who had collected in the trees near Him, flew down and pricked His n^ed feet and uncovered head with thorns ■5?hich they had gathered ; but the swallows, moved with tender pity, busied themselves in extracting them from His flesh. Then the Saviour pronounced the following sentence : " You magpies shall henceforth make your nests on the tops of the tallest trees, a despised and hated race ; while ye swallows shall build in safety, sheltered from danger and beloved by those under whose eaves ye dwell." (" Bulletin de la Soc. Hist, de S. Jean d'Ang^ly," 1865.) , d. In the Ober Innthal the swallows are believed to have helped the Lord God in building the sky. e. "Why the swallow is the friend of man is thus explained in a,n old legend. Adam, when descending from Paradise to the earth, first put his foot on the island of Serendib, and Eve descended at Jedda. Adam, being alone, began to lament his fate in so piteous a manner that the cherubim, touched by hiS; lamentation, complained to the Almighty. God sent the swallow, which came to Adam, and begged Viirn to give her some hair of his whiskers. Some historians say that Adam had neither beard nor whiskers in Paradise, and that it,bega,n to grow only after his having been driven from the presence of the_ Lord. However this may be, the swallow having got some of iiis whiskers, " flew to Jedda, where she took also some of Eve's hair, and made in that way the first step of uniting them together again. In recompense for what the swaUow carried on as internuncio between Adam and Eve, she is allowed to nestle in the dwellings of men." (Jones' "Credulities Past and Present," 436.) (5) But, as was before remarked, the swallow is also viewed in another light. In some cases, and amongst some nations, particularly those belonging to the Celtic race, the reverence and respect in which the bird is held proceed from fear ; and its influence upon mankind, instead of being propitious, is sinister and diabolical. Hence, in Ireland, according to Dr. Whately, it is called " devil's bird," and the country-people hold that there is a certain hair on every one's head which, if a swallow can pick ofi', the man is doomed to eternal perdition. So, too, in some parts of Scotland it is said to have a drop of the dell's blood in its veins ; and in Caithness is called " witch hag." There, as we see from Smiles' " Life of Robert Dick," p. 97, a belief is current that if a swallow flies under the arm of a person it immediatelybecomes paralysed. In Franche Comt6 (according to De Nore, " Dictionnaire des Superstitions — Hirondelle "), a somewhat similar idea prevails ; viz., that i£ a swallow flies under a cow's belly the milk will become blood, and the cow is said to be a/rondaUe, i.e. swallow-struck. The orily way to cure this, disease is to tie the animal up in its stall, milk it, and sprinkle the milk at a spot whore cross-roads meet. In England the presence of the swallow is sometimes considered as ominous of death : in Yorkshire, for instance, where its descent down a chimney is a sure sign of the speedy decease of one of the inmates of the house. The sanle result is believed in Norfolk to follow from an unusually large gathering of these birds round a dweUing, with the addition that with them the departing spirit will take flight. A correspondent of Notes and Queries, when one day visiting the sick child of a poor woman — a girl about twelve — had the following remark made to her by the mother : " A swallow lit upon her shoulder, ma'am, a short time since, as she was walking home from church, . and that is a sure sign of death." (Dyer's " Folk Lore," 69.) With this we may compare the following couplet from Parker's " The Nightingale " (1632), referring to swallows — " And if in any's hand she chance to die, ' 'Tis counted ominous, I know not why." M. Gubematig, ii. 241, gives several instances of the bad esteem in which this bird was held by the ancients, saying that " though beautiful and pro- pitious in spring, it becomes ugly and aloiost diabolical in the other seasons." PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 55 In Germany and the northern nations this may have arisen from the swallow's ohesnut red head and throat, which would connect it with the lightning god.Thor. For the same reason the redbreast and the woodpecker, both lightning birds, are looked upon with mixed feelings of reverence and terror (see pp. ). 6. Swallow rhymes. As the swallow skims the y/aAer after flies, the Scotch children throw stones at him, and say — " Swallow, swallow, sail the water ! Ye'll get brose and ye'U get butter." " HirondWe, belle hirondMe, En hiver oil t'eu vas-tu ? En Athene Chez Etieune Pourquoi m'l'demandes-tu ? " Tonain, " Dictionnaire du Patois Saintongeais." The mountaineers of the Vosges have a very high idea of the swallow's love for order and cleanliness. They say that when the birds return to their old nests, if they find dirt and poverty in the household, yovi may hear them twittering to each other — " Qu6 i'n'allb , quo j'n'all5, tot a pien, Qub j'ferv^n6, il n'y 6 pu rien, il n'y 6 pu rien, Chj^ie bien, chfie bien ! " i.e., ' Quand nous nous en aliens, tout est plein ; quand nous revenons il n'y a plus rien ! il n'y a plus rien ! perde bien, perde bien ! — i.e. vous fites dea des- tructeurs ' (Oberlin, "Patois du Bande la Roche.") This is similar to the Mecklenburg rhyme — " To Joar, ar ik furk genk, Woren aUe Skoppen un Skiuren vull ; Un ar ik weer kam. Is Alles verquickelt, verquackelt, verheert und verkehrt." i.e., ' Last year, when I went away, all the sheds and barns were full ; but now, when I come back, I find everything befouled, squandered, emptied and wasted.' 7. Proverbial saying. " One swallow does not make a summer (or spring)," has its equivalent in many languages. 8. "When swallows gather," they say at Sherringham, in Norfolk, "before they leave, and sit in long rows on the church leads, they are settling who is to die before they come again." 56 PEOVINOIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Genus Chelidon. MARTIN' (Chelidon wrUca). A niojcname, like Robin ; hence the bird is named after S. Martin, as a proper name : see under. 1. Names given to the bird from its frequenting the dwellings of man. House martin. Eaves or Easin swallow (Craven). Window swallow. 2. Also called Swallow (Eoxburgh ; West Riding). Martin swallow (East Lothian). Martlet. (See under Swift.) A corruption of Martnet, short for Martinet, which is French term for the swift (Cypsdns rirpus). 3. For the association of the martin and the swallow in nursery rhyme, see under Swallow. 4 The following, from the Harz, is a duologue between a church swallow and a house swallow (a swift and a martin) ; the subject being a farmer's wife : — Tlie swift. — "Dat Weibsbild, dat zarte Bild, Wiel's in de Karke geit ! " i.e., ' Look at that picture of a woman, that dehcate picture, how she walks • into church ! ' The martin. — " Wenn du siehst, wenn ik seh, Wenn se Middags in ehr Kbken steht, Slit sent as de Diiwel in de Hblle." i.e., ' If you saw her, as I see her, in her kitchen about noontide (you would say) she looked like the devil in heU.' Genus Cotile. SAND MARTIN {Cotile riparia). 1. So called from its habit of excavating with its bill a nest in sandy banks ; whence also Bank martin. Bank swallow (Craven). Pit martin. Sand, or River, swallow, Sandy swallow (Stirling ; Roxburgh). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 57 Sand baekie (Forfar). Bitter {i.e. Biter) bank (Roxburgh). Bitterie (Roxburgh). 2. Various names; Shore bird. Witchuck (Orkney Isles). i.e., Witch Chick (see under " Swallow," p. 55). Section Oscines Curvirostees. Family Certhiid^. Genus Certhia. TREE CREEPER {Gerthia familiar is). 1. The following names are given to the bird from its habit of climbing : — Creeper. Tree climber. Tree, or Bark-speiler, i.e. climber (East Lothian ; Stirling). Creep tree (Norfolk). Tree clipper (Oxen). Cf. Grimpereau (France) ; Trepador (Spain) ; Bamipiat (Pied- mont) ; Grii/per (Germany). 2. From its climbing Hke the Picidse, it is called Woodpecker (Ireland ; Perthshire). Cf. Petit pec (Sain- tonge). Brown woodpecker. 3. Various names. Tomtit (Ireland). Cuddy (Northants). 4. The Tree creeper is one of the birds sacred to S. Martin in France, and called after him Martinet (Lisieux). L'oiseau de Saint Martin (Toulon). 58 PEOVINCJAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS, Section Oscines Conieostees. Family Fhingillid^. Sub-family Fbingillin^. Genus Caeduelis. GOLDFINCH {Carduelis elegans). 1. So called from its bright variegated plumage; whence also Goldie, or Gold spink. Goud spink, or Gooldspink (Scotland). Gool french (Devon). Eedcap ; King Harry or King Harry Redcap (Salop ; Suffolk; North Eiding). So it is called in Brittany, Pdbor — i.e. Pcvpe d'or — because of the likeness its . •crimson head hears to the papal tiara, and also from the golden-yeUow colour of part of its plumage ; and the name given in the same province to the heat looking young fellow in a village is, Ar papor euz arm hoi basl/red-^.e. the goldfinch of the young men. Seven-coloured linnet ; Speckled Dick (Salop). Foolscoat. (Sir Thos. Browne, " Birds of Norfolk.") Lady with the twelve flounces (Salop). Sheriff's man (Salop). From its bright-coloured feathers bearing a resemblance to a showy Uvery. Proud tailor (Derby; Notts; Leicester; Somerset; Northants; Warwick). Called in Gaelic, Las air-choille — i.e., Flame of the wood. 2. From its fondness for thistle seeds it is called Thistle finch (Stirling). Cf. Ga/rdonneret (France) ; Gardello (Italy) ; Disteljmk {Germany). 3. Various names. Linnet (Salop). Jack nicker (Northants ; Salop ; Cheshire). Draw bird or Draw water. From its being taught, when in its cage, to draw up water in a bucket. (Sir Thos. Browne, " Birds of Norfolk.") So it has in Holland the title of Fitter or i'Mttcr=French Puisev/r — i.e. drawer of water. Sweet William. From its melodious cry. 4. In the north, young goldfinches are called Grey Kates or Pates. By London fanciers the name of Brancher is given to a goldfinch in its first year. PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 59 Genus Cheysomitris. SISKIN {Ghrysomitris spinus). From Swedish sisha (i.e. chirper). 1 . Also called Aberdavine. It was a long time before I could discover the derivation- of this word, but I feel sure that it is the same as alder-finch, equal to the German Erlenzeisig ; and the French prov. (dial. Vienne) Pou {i.q. pidlv^) de vergne, and Cfie d'aune. With regard to this Mr. Thompson (i. 266) writes: ■"They (i.e. siskins) were feeding on the seed of the elder. . . . They fed wholly on the alder, and looked beautiful, hanging like little parrots, picking at the drooping seeds of that tree." 2. Folk lore. The siskin, like t}ie swallow and the raven, is believed in Bohemia and Tyrol -to have the power of procuring a stone which renders the possessor invisible. {Qrohmann, p. 72 ; Zingerle, p. 91.) Genus LiGURiNUS. GREENFINCH (lAgurinus cMoris). 1. So called from the yellowish-green of its plumage; whence also G-reen linnet (Norfolk ; Lancashire ; Scotland generally). Green bird. , .Green olf (Norfolk). For Olf, see under Bullfinch. Green grosbeak. Greeney (Cumberland ; Forfar). Of. Verdiire (France) ; Griinling (Germany). 2. Various names. Peas weep. Because one of its notes, sounding thus, closely resembles that of the peewit (which see). 60 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Genus Coccotheaustbs. HAWFINCH {Coccothraustes vulgaris). (Haw = a hedge, hence berry of hawth-orn. A.-S. haga, an enclosure.) 1. From its fondness for cherry stones, it is called Cherry finch. ' Berry breaker (Hants). Of. Beque cerise (France), also Casse noix. For the same reason it is known in Norway by the title of " Cherry bird," and in Sweden by that of Sten knock or Stone-breaker. 2. Various names. Grosbeak. Cf. Qros bee (France). Coble (Sir Thos. Browne's " Birds of Norfolk "). Kate. • Genus Passee. HOUSE SPARROW {Passer domesticus). A.-S. spearwa, from Icel. sporr — lit. a flutterer; whence also 1. Spadger. Spurdie (Orkney Isles). Sprig, Sprug, Sprong, Spug (Roxburgh ; Perth ; East Lothian). Spyng (Kirkcudbright). 2. Various names. Craff (Cumberland). Row-dow or Roo-doo (Northants). Thatch or Thack sparrow (Northants ; Salop). Easing sparrow (Salop). From the eaves, or easing, of houses being their favourite resort for nesting purposes. Philip or Phip. From the cry of the bird. Cf . Filip (Britanny). So Catullus : " Sed circumsiliens, modo hub, -modo illuc, Ad solum dominum usque pipilabat," — PKOVINCIA.L NAMES OF BRITISH BIEDS. , 61 and Shatespeare, King John, Act I., scene i. : Gurnet/ loq. — " Good leave, good Philip. Bastard. — Philip ! Sparrow ! " 3. Proverbial saying : "There are no. sparrows at Lindholme." • (Hatfield Chase.) " Tom o' Lindholme being left at home to protect the corn from sparrows, to save trouble got them all into the bam, put a harrow into the window to keep them in, and starved them to death." [N. and Q., Ser. I., vol. viii.. p. 532.) Lindholme is about three miles from Hatfield, in Yorkshire. 4. Superstitions relative to sparrows. a. A sparrow, if caught, must not be kept alive, otherwise the parents )ot the catcher will die. (Kent.) b. Sparrows gifted with prophetic power. " Look, my dear ," said S. S's. wife to him one morning as he lay in bed — " look at that kite flying round the room ! " He saw nothing, but heard a noise like a large bird flapping its wings. A few minutes afterwards a sparrow came, dashed its bill against the window, and flew away again. " Oh ! " said Mrs. S., " something is the matter with poor Edward " (her Jbrother) . She had hardly said the word when a man on horseback rode up arid said, when S. opened the ' door to him, "Don't frighten poor Mary, but master has just expired ! " The messenger had only ridden from Somers Town to Compton Street, Soho. . I had this story from S. himself ^ who was possessed with a notion that the sparrow that tapped at his vrindow was the soul of his brother-in-law." (Kelly, " Curiosities of Indo-European Folk-Lore," pp. 104, 105.) The following instance is yeoorded by Aubrey, date 1643 : — "As Major John Morgan, of WeUs, was marching with the King's army into the west; he fell sick of a malignant fever at Salisbury, and was brought dangerously ill to my father's, at Broad Chalk, where he was lodged secretly in a garret. There came a Sparrow to the chamber-window, which pecked the lead of ,a certain panel only, and only one side of the lead of the lozenge, and made only one small hole in it. He continued this pecking and biting the lead during the whol? time of his sickness (which was not less than a month). When the major went away, the sparrow desisted, and came thither no more. Two of the servants that attended the major declared this for a certainty." This prophetic character of the pparrow is alluded to by Chester (" Love's Martyr," p. 122) as follows : — " 'The unsatiate sparrow doth prognosticate. And is held good for divination, For flying here and there, from gate to gate. Foretells true things by animadvertion : A flight of sparrows flying in the day Did prophesie the fall and sacke of T'roy." 5. Mr. EalstoD ("Eussian Folk Tales," p. 331), gives two curious legends connected with the sparrow. The first runs as follows : — "When the Jews were seeking for Christ in the garden, all the birds, except the sparrow, tried to draw them away from His hiding-place. Only the sparrow attracted them thither by its shrill chirruping. Then the Lord cursed the sparro^v, and forbade that men should eat its flesh." -.«.,,, The second tells us that before the Crucifixion the swallows earned off the 62 PEOVipCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. nails provided for the use of the executioners, but the sparrows brought them back. And' while our Lord was hanging on the cross the sparrows were mali- ciously exclaiming " Jif ! Jif ! " i.e. " He is living ! He is living ! '■' in order to urge on the tormentors to fresh cruelties. But the .swallows cried, with oppo- site intent, '■ Umer ! Umer ! " i.e. " He is dead ! He is dead ! " Therefore it is that to kill a swallow is a sin, and that its nest brings good luck tc a house. But the sparrow is an unwelcome guest, whose entry into a cottage is a presage of woe. As a punishment for its sins its legs have been fastened together by invisible bonds, and therefore it always hops, not being able to run. 7. Bohemian charms to keep sparrows from the crops. a. Stick upright in a field a splinter cut from a piece of timber out of which a coffin has been made. h. Lay a bone taken from a grave on the threshold or window-siU of your bam. c. If, while sowing, you put three grains of -corn under your tongue, wait till you have reached the end of the furrow in silence, and then spit them out " in the Name, etc.," no sparrow will come into your field, though your neigh- bour's may be f uU of them. Genus Feingilla. CHAFFmCH {FringiUa ccelehs). So cSiUed from a supposed fondness for chaff'. 1. From its reiterated monotonous call-note it receives the names Pink. Spink (North ; Midland ; Eastern counties). Pink twink (Devon ; Somerset ; Salop). Pinkety (Northants). Sheely (do.) ShUfa, or Sheelfa (North ; Scotland). Chink chaffey (Hants). Chink chink (Salop). Cf . Quinquin (Normandy) ; Pint (Brittany) ; Finty (Hungary). 2. From the variegated hues of its plumage it is called Pea, Pied or Pine, finch (Midlands ; Salop). Shell apple. Shell or Sheld = variegated or spotted. Cf. "Sheldrake," which see. Apple = AIpe (see Bulfinch). 3. From the white bands on its wings. Whitewing. White finch. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 6^ 4. Various names. Copper finch (Devon ; Cornwall). From the ohesuut colour of its breast. Chaffie (Aberdeen). Daffinch (North Devon). 1 i.q. Chaffinch. Apple bird (Cornwall). Horse finch. Buck finch. > Bullspink (Craven ; Teesdale). Bully (North Eiding).. Scobby (North). Koberd, or Eobinet. A familiar name. Boldie (Aberdeen). Snabby (Kirkcudbright). Maze finch (Cornwall). Charbob (Derbyshire). Beech finch. From its partiality to beech nuts. Brisk finch. Briskie, Brichtie (Kirkcudbright). From its smart, lirely activity : hence " Gai comme un pinson. ' ' Wheatsel bird (Norfolk). Applied to the male chaffinch, says Mr. Gumey, perhaps from their congre- gating together in autumn about the season of wheat sowing. Wet bird (Rutland;- Stirling). Because its cry, " weet, weet," is considered to foretell rain. Hence in Scotland, when the children hear it, they say " Weet-weet ! (the cry) Dreep-dreep ! " (the consequence.) (Chambers). The name CCelebs, or Bachelor, was bestowed upon the species by Liunseus, because he noticed that the females migrated from Sweden southward in the autumn, while the males did not : hence the title, in reference to their "celibate" state. , 5. Song of the ijhaffinch. This bird is highly esteemed in Germany for its musical powers, and extra- vagant prices are given for first-class performers. As an instance may be cited the fact that a workman at Ruhla, in Thuringia, in the excess of his admira- tion for a good bird, gave a cow in exchange for it— hence the prpverb current in the Harz, — " This chaffinch is worth a cow." Bechsteiu gives the titles of . soma of their most admired songs : e.g., The Double Trill of the Harz, The Eeiterzong or Eider's Song, The Wine Song, The Bridegroom's 8ong, The 64 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Double Trill, The Gutjahr, or Good Year Song, The 'Quakia Song, The Pithia. The Wine Song runs thus — " Fritz, Fritz, Fritz, willst du mit mir zum Weine gehen? " {i.e. 'Fritz, Fritz, Fritz, wilt thou to vrine -wiih me ? ') The Bride- groom's Song is thought to represent the following — "Fink, fink, fink, fink, toist du ? w3lst du nicht den Braiitigam zieren ? " (i.e. ' Finch, finch, finch finch, dost thou hear ? wilt thou not play the bridegroom ? ') The Double TrUl is considered the most perfect, and may be thus expressed — " Finkferlink- finkfink, zischesia, harvelalalalaziscutschia." In France different interpretations, according to M. Rolland, are given to the song of the chaf&nch. In the neighbourhood of Orleans it is supposed to say " Je suis le fils d'un riche prieur " (hence the name of Siche prieu/r has been applied to it). In Normandy it cries " Qui est ce qui veut venir h, Saint Symphorien ? " In the Saintonge the chaffinch asks for " In pUein, pUein pUein, p'tit pl&t de rolitie " (i.e. a piece of bread soaked in wine). In Lorraine it says — " Fi, fi ! les laboureux, JVirrone ben sans eux ! " About Paris the song represents — " Oui, Oui, Qui, Oui, je suis un bon Family IJpuPiDiE. Genus TTpupa. HOOPOE {Up-wpa epops). 1. The name hoopoe corresponds with the Latin upupa, French huppe, all of which words are intended to express the bird's cry. 2. The hoopoe is commonly considered to be extremely filthy and unclean in its feeding and general manner of living. Hence Ihe Germans call it Stinker or Mistvogel, but more generally Wiedehopf; and in Anjou the country-people give it the title of Goqpuant. In the " Penny Cyclopsedia,''' xxvi. 35, the following old French lines are given as referring to its unsavoury reputation — " Dddans uu creux avec fauge et ordure La huppe fait ses ceufs et sa maison." There is no doubt, as Mr. Wood remarks (" Nat. Hist." ii. 201), that its nest has a very pungent and disgusting odour ; but this arises from the fact that the tail glands of the bird secrete . a substance that is extremely offensive to human nostrils, although it is unheeded by the birds themselves. 3. From its striking appearance and remarkable form ar& derived the names Ooq des bois (Vosges). Coq d'6t6 (Brittany). Serviteur an roi (Montbeliard). Gallo di Marzo (Genoa). In Sweden it is known by the name of Hwr Fogel, the army bu'd, because from its ominous cry, frequently heard in the wilds of the forest, while the bird itself moves off as any one approaches, the common people have supposed that seasons of war and scarcity are impending (Lloyd's " Scand. Advent," ii. 321). The Arabs, according to Mr. Tristram ("Ibis," i. 27), call it "the doctor," believing it to possess marvellous medicinal qualities, its head being an indis- pensable ingredient in all charms, and in the practice of witchcraft. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 107 The Turkish name is Tir-chaouah or Courier bird, because its tuft resembles, the plume of feathers worn by a courier in token of his office. 4. Polk lore of the hoopoe. (1) As a lightning bird. In Swabia (Meier, " Schwab. Sagen," No. 265) the hoopoe is supposed to be acquainted with the mysterious springwort, the plint before which doors and rocks fly open, as in North Germany the woodpecker and in Tyrol the swallow are believed to have the same knowledge. Jewish fable (Buxtorf, "Lex Talmud.," coL 2455) tells us that it was by means of this bird that Solomon gained possession of the coveted " schamir," a worm the size of a barleycorn, but able to penetrate the hardest flint, with the aid of which he wrought the stones fpr his temple. So, too, iElian relates of the hoopoe that, by means of a plant called Troa, she can burst through any obstacle separating her from her young (" Hist. Animal ," iii. 26). For more information on tlus subject see Baring Gould's " Curious Myths," ii. 130, 131. (2) O^^g to the peculiarity of its appearance this bird has been the subject of many quaint legends : e.g. — a. Oriental. " It is related that Solomon was once journeying across the desert, and was fainting with heat, when a large flock of hoopoes came to his assistance,. and by flying between the sun and the monarch formed an impenetrable cloud with their wings and bodies. Grateful for their ready help, Solomon asked the birds what reward they would choose in return for their services. After some consultation among themselves the hoopoes ansv/ered that they would like each bird to be decorated with a golden'orown ; and in spite of Solomon's advice they persisted in their request, and received their crowns accordingly. For a few days they were justly proud of their golden decora- tion, and strutted among the less favoured birds with great exultation, and repaired to every stream or puddle, in order to admire the reflection of their crowns in the water. But before very long a fowler happened to see one of the promoted birds, and on taking it in his net, discovered the value of its crown. Immediately the whole country was in an uproar, and from that- moment the hoopoes had no rest. Every fowler spread his nets for them, every archer lay in wait for thenf, and every little boy set his springle or laid his rude trap in the hope of catching one of these valuable birds. At last. they were so wearied with persecution that they sent one or two of the survivors to Solomon, full of repentance at their rejection of his advice, and begging him to rescind the ^tft which they had so unwisely demanded. Solomon granted their request, and removed the golden crown from their heads ; but, being unwilling that the birds should be left without a mark by which they might be distinguished from their fellows, he substituted a crown of feathers for that of gold, and dismissed them rejoicing." (Wood's "Nat. Hist." vol. ii., p. 200 ; Curzon's "Visits to the Monasteries in the Levant," p. 152.) Like the lapwing (see infra), it has the credit of being able to point out th& locality of hidden springs. This idea seems to have arisen from the habit of the bird, when settling on the ground, of bending down the head and raising it suddenly with a jerky motion. b. Egyptian. Mr. Houghton, in his " Natural History of the Ancients," p. _ 207, says- that when the Egyptians -wished to represent the quality of gratitude^ they delineated a hoopoe, because this is the only dumb animal which, after it has- 108 .PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. been brouglit up by its parents, repays their kindness to them when old, for it makes a nest in the place where it was reared, and trims their wings and brings them food, till the old birds acquire a new plumage, and are able to look after themselves. This agrees with a Hindu story — a variation. of the legend of King Lear, narrated by .lElian., (Gubematis ii. 230.) c. German. In Tyrol the hoopoe is believed to possess magical power. The man who carries its eyes about with him-in his pocket is beloved by all, and is ever suc- cessful in the law courts, while its head protects the bearer againpt enchant- ment. (Busoh, " Deutsche Volksaberglaube," p. 209.) (3) The hoopoe as prognosticating weather. Gubernatis (ii. 230) says that by the ancients its song before the vines jipened was looked upon as a prediction of a plentiful vintage and good wine. It is believed to foretell rain by its hoarse cry. (4) The hoopoe and the bittern. " Which is your favourite pasture for your cows ? " asked a. gentleman of an old herdsman. " Here, sir," was the answer, " where the grass is not too rich and not too poor ; anywhere else would be useless." "Why so?" The herds- man replied, " Do you hear that booming cry proceeding from the meadow ? That is the bittern, who once kept, cows, as did the hoopoe also ; and I wiU tell you a story about them. — The bittern fed his herds on rich green pastures, where flowers grew in abundance, so that his cattle became wild and frisky. But the hoopoe drove his on to high and barren hills, where the wind blew the sand about in clouds, and they got thinner and thinner, and lost all their .Strength. One day, towards evening, when the herdsmen were about to return home, the bittern could not get his cows together, they were so mettlesome, frolicking and kicking up their heels all round him. He called ' Bunt herum ! ' ii.e. Here, Dapple, here !), but all to no purpose — they would not listen. On the other hand, the hoopoe could not make his cows stand up, they were so weak and tired. ' Up ! up ! up ! ' he cried ; but it was of no vise — there they lay on the ground, and refused to stir. That is what happens if you go to extremes. Even now, although these birds have given up keeping cattle, the bittern stUl cries Herum, and the hoopoe Up ! up ! " (Grimm, " Kinder- und Hausmarohen, No. 173.) (3) .The hoopoe and the woodpecker. The hoopoe is the friend and companion of the woodpecker (Gecinus viridM), Once upon a time the two birds resolved to quit their native land for foreign parts ; but the sea lay in their,'path ! However, they flew half-^ay across ; but -then the woodpecker, who was tired, went fast asleep ! The hoopoe, to save his companion from drowning, cried, " Hoop-hoop ! " thus keeping his drowsy friend awake, and enabling him to make the passage in safety. The woodpecker, who was aware of, the kindness that had been shown to him, was anxious to show his gratitude, and so sfet himself to bore a hole in a tree to serve as a nest for the hoopoe. This was the first time the woodpecker exercised his boring powers. (Haute Bretagne.) (6) The hoopoe and the cuckoo. Tn early times the cuckoo had a crown, but the hoopoe has deprived her of it. It happened in this wise. When the birds were -about to celebrate a wedding, the hoopoe being selected to give away the bride, and therefore anxious to add to the dignity of his appearance, asked the cuckoo to lend him his crown. . The latter kindly consented, but when the hoopoe discovered how well it suited him he kept it and never returned it to its owner ! Ever PROVINCIAL names' OF BRITISH BIRDS. 10& since the cuckoo has been calling " Kluku ! Kluku I " — i.e. ' You knave ! you knave ! ' while the hoopoe answers " Jdu ! Jdu ! " — i.e. ' I'm coming ! I'm coming ! ' (Grohmann, p. 68). In Bavaria the hoopoe is supposed to .play the part of attendant or lackey to the cuckoo (as the wryneck is called in Devonshire tha " dinnick " or cuckoo's mate), and, according to Mr. King ("Sacred Trees and Flowers,'' in Qimrterly Review for July 1863), has a mysterious connection with the plantain, or waybread, which is said to have been once a maiden who, watching by the wayside for her lover, was changed into the plant which still loves to fix itself beside the Ijeaten path. Once in seven years it becomes a bird — either the cuckoo or the hoopoe. (This seems to require corroboration ; but Simrook refers to Panzer's '• Bayerische Sageu," ii. 204, for further particulars — a work to which I have failed to obtain access.) Sub order Coccyges. Family CiuouLiDiE. Genus CuouLUS. CUCKOO {Guculus ccmorus). 1. So called from its cry. Cf. Coucou (France); Kukuk (Germany); Koekoek (Holland); Gucoo, Gucullo (Italy) ; Eohu (Persia). . 2. Other names are Gowk (North; Scotland). Cf . Gaec, Geac (Anglo-Saxon) ; Goek (Sweden) ; Gouk (Norway). Gawky (Dorset). In Middleton's Trick to catch the Old One, Act iv., sc. 5, the cuckoo is called " the Welsh ambassador." It has been suggested that this name was given to it because its notes resemble words in the Welsh language (G^mSteii ■«»'«. Magaiim, 1840) ; also from the annual arrival of Welshmen in search of summer or other employment, who might enter England about the time of the cuckoo's appearance (Dyer's " Folk-Lore," p. 61). But the following song, which occurs in a pamphlet entitled "The Welsh Ambassador, 1643 -Her Embassador's Message described, to the tune of the Merry Pedler," etc.,, seems to point to a different reason : — ' 1 " On a day when Jenkin Did waUce abroad to heare The birds rejoyce. With pleasant voyoe ; In spring time of the yeare ; Proudly and loudly Her heard a bird then sing, Cuokoe, Cuckoe. The cuckoe never lins (i.e. ceases), But still doth cry so mery merily, And Cuckoe, cuckoe sings, i 10 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. \ " He thought her had flouted Poore Jenkin with a jeere, And told her in soorne That the home Should on her brow appeare ; Soundly and roundly This bird one note doth sing Cuokoe, cuekoe. The cuekoe never line, etc, " It is knowne her country Doth many profits bring, Sheepe and goates And cloathe for coates, And many a good thing ; Cheeses and friezes; And that fine bird that sings Cuokoe, cuokoe, etc. " Her colour is most comely. And a Round-head is she. And yet no sect She doth respect But of her note is free : 'Tis pity in City That this same bird neare sings Cuekoe, cuokoe, etc. " If that she iu Cheap-side Upon the Crosse were scene. Out of hand The trayned band ; Would come against her in spleen ; Drumming and gunning. To kill this bird that sings Cuekoe, cuekoe, etc. " Therefore her Embasgadour No pedler is of wares. Her hath no pabk Upon her back. Nor for no Cuckold cares : "Without feaj-e Doth jeere And in one note still singe - Cuckoei cuokoe, etc." 3. Folk lore of the cuckoo. The folk lore of the cuckoo is almost inexhaustible. Mr. Hardy has com- 3)iled a most valuable and interesting store of information on this subject in his ■"Popular History of the Cuckoo," which appeared in the "Folk-Lore Record," Part II., and to which I am much indebted. To it I must refer those who are anxious for further particulars ; also to Mannhardt's most learned paper in the " Zeitschrift fur Deutsche Mythologie," vol. iii., pp. 209-98. PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Ill (1) The ouckooas announcing spring. " There is no bird," says Grimm ("D. M."675), " to which the gift of prophecy is more universally conceded than the cuckoo, whose clear and measured voice lings in the young foliage of the grove. " In this respect, as the herald of warmth, he seems to be intimately connected with S. Gertrude, the successor of Freya or Iduna, goddesses of love, of spring, of beauty, wjiose tears were pearls and flowers. Therefore, hke S. Gertrude, who is believed to be the banisher of ice and snow, he announces spring. There are many rhymes com- memorating the several epochs of his stay with us, are which the reader is referred to Mr. Hardy, the best known of which is perhaps the following : — " In April, the cuckoo shows his biU : In May, he sings both night and day ; , In June, he altereth his tune ;, In July, he prepares to fly ; Come August, go he must." (Norfolk.) To which the Suffolk people add — " In September, you'll oilers remember ; In October, 'ull never get over." In Northumberland his advent is earUer, for " The cuckoo comes of mid March, And cucka of mid Apenll ; And gauns away of Midsummer month (or Lammas-tide), When the com begins to fill." This date for his departure agrees with the Guernsey rhyme — " Le coucou s'en va en Aoftt ; L'^pi d'orge ltd pique la gorge.'' A West Shropshire proverb runs — " The cuckoo sings in April The cuckoo sings in May ; The cuckoo sings at Midsummer, But not upon the day." So a common Lancashire saying runs — " The first cock of hay Frights the cuckoo away ; " corresponding with the Breton story that the first time the cuckoo came to Brittany, he made his riest like the other birds, and then, highly delighted with himself, took a walk in the fields. But alas ! a waggon full of hay passed over him and crushed bis loins, hence it is that he files so heavily. ' Ever since «that fatal day, he leaves the country when the hay is ready for cutting (Sebillot ii. 172). The west of Scotland ploughman coincides with the Guernsey fisherman in the opinion that the cuckoo files away on the first sight of barley in the ear ; and in Lanarkshire they say that " the cuckoo comes wi' a haw-leaf, and gangs away wi' a bear (four-rowed barley) head." It is believed in many countries that the cuckoo always appears on some pai-fcicular day. Thus— a. In some parts of England there is a saying that — < ' ' On the third of April Comes in the cuckoo and nightingale," on which see under Nightingale, 1 (1). 112 PEOVINCIAL .NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. In Sussex it is believed that a certain old woman has charge of all the cuckoos, and fills her apron with them in the spring. If she is in a good humour she allows several to take flight at Heathfield fair, April li, but only . permits one or two to escape if cross or vexed. In Northamptpnshire the 15th of April is calledcuckoo-day. In Worcestershire they say that you never hear the cuckoo before Tenhury fair (April 20th), or after Pershore fair (June 26), where he buys a horse and rides away on it. In the West Riding the cuckoo is supposed to arrive on April 21st. In Wales, according to Mr. Dyer (" English Folk-Lore,'' p. 57), "it is con- sidered unlucky to hear the cuckoo before the 6th of April, but you wUl have prosperity for the whole year if you hear it on the 28th." Mr. Hardy says that " in Scotland the advent of the cuckoo calls forth the old season's spite,," and the consequence is " a gowk storm." Hence in Craven the proverb : — , ' "In the month of AvereL The gowk comes over the hill In a shower of rain." 6. In France. The cuckoo is considered in the south of France to arrive on St. Benedict's day (March 21), and there is a saying ''that he ought to be heard on that festival ; and that if he has not begun his song by the 25th (the Feast of the Annunciation of the B. V. M.) he must be either killed orirozen." The latter half of this is current in N^ormandy ; while the Breton peasants make the three last days of March the date of his arrival ; and in Franohe Comt^ he is expected on April 1st. (Rolland.) c. In Germany. The German country -people make the 14th of April (the festival of SS. Valerian and Tiburtius). the date of his visit, when he is accompanied by the nightingale (which see). ' d. In Switzerland. The Swiss imagine that the cuckoo never sings before the 3rd of April, and never after Midsummer ; but he cannot sing till he has eaten a bird's egg. This is a superstition shared by the Bohemians'(Grohmann, p. 69). e. In Norway. " The 1st of May (SS. Plulip and James) is called in Norway ' Gawk's mass ' (cuckoo's mass), because then the cuckoo was expected to make its appearance. Heiice the emblem for the day is a cuckoo." ("Cambridge Antiquarian Communications," iv. 159. ■/. In Italy. " The Venetians say that this bird ought to come on the 8th of April ; if he' does not come on the 8th he has either been caught or is dead ; if he does not come on the 10th he has been caught in the hedge ; if he does not come on the 20th he has been caught in the corn ; and if he does not conie on the 30th, the shepherds must have eaten him -n^ith polenta." (Pasqualigo, "Proverbi Veneti," ii. 100.) The arrival of the cuckoo naturally leads to the question, Where does he come from ? ' The inhabitants of Towednack, in Cornwall, wiU refer you for an answer to their cuckoo feast, which takes place on the nearest Sunday to the 28th of 'April ; the origin of which is as follows : — " It happened in very early times, when winters extended further into the spring than they do now, that one of-the old inhabitants resolved to be jovial, nowithstanding the in- PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 113 clemency of the season ; so he invited all his neighbours, and to warm his house he placed on the burning faggots the stump of a tree. It began to blaze, and, inspired by the warmth and light, they began to sing and drink ; when lo ! with a whiz and a whirr, out flew a bird from the hollow in the stump, crying . ' Cuckoo ! cuckoo 1 ' " (Hunt's " Popular Bomances of the West of England," ii., 200). This reminds us of Willoughby's story of the cuckoo lying dormant in a bundle of feathersiu the hollow of an old tree, which shouted ' Cuokoo ! ' in winter when aroused from its slumbers by the heat of a stove ; and Mr. Hardy (p. 20) tells us that in Qassendus, " Physiose, etc.," the cuckoo is said to have issued froiii a Christmas log in Champagne. But the notion of the hibernation of swallows, etc., without food is very old, alluded to by Aristotle, amongst others. Having got the cuokoo, the next thing seems to have been to keep him, as it appears he was considered as the cause of summer. Hence we have several tales, recorded by Mr. Hardy, of various attempts on the part of sages to enclose him — e.g., the "vrise men of Gotham," in Nottinghamshire ; the " coves of Lorbottle," in Northumberland ; certain Cornishmen, residence unknown ; and the " cuckoo , penners " of Somerset, to all of whom apply the words of Fulke GreviUe, Lord Brooke (1654—1628), that " Fools only hedge the cuckoo in." If his origin was mysterious, so too was the change which he was supposed to undergo. Aristotle and Pliny both mention that it was the belief of some that during a portion of the year he was converted into a real bird of prey. A belief not yet extinct, as the following table will show : — • In Durham and Yorkshire the cuckoos are said to turn into hawks in the winter {Times, Sept. 3, 1863). In Cambridgeshire they are cuckoos for three months, and then , change into hawks. In Derbyshire they change into hawks, and whistle and sing during the transformation (" Long Ago," 205). In Switzerland the eucko* heard in one year will be young eagles in the next. * In Bohemia the bird is » cuokoo during the spring, but the rest of the year he is a hawk w^o steals fowls and kills pigeons (Grohmann, 69). In North Germany he becomes a sparrow-hawk (after S. John's day), which in the main agrees with a statement in Plutarch (see Gubernatis, "Zool. Mythol," ii. 235). In Normandy " Enlre Juin et JuiUet Le coucou devient ^mouchet." In some parts of France it is believed that about S. James' day he becomes a bird of prey, but resumes his former shape in the spring, when he returns on the kite's back. (This arises from the feeble and lean appearance of the bird, owing to its moulting about the end of March.) (2) The cuckoo as prognosticator of the weather and harvest Freya, whose attributes S. Gertrude inherited, was, as Sir G. W. Cox points out ("Aryan Mythology," i. 381), the bringer of rain and sunshine for the fruits of the earth. Hence the song of the cuckoo, who is intimately con- nected with her, marks the growing, rains of spring, and also foretells the character of the coming harvest. a. The cuckoo is the bird of spring ; hence, says Gubernatis, " When it appears, the first claps of thunder are heard in the sky, announcing the seasop of heat." The Germans connect it with good and warm weather, and in Franche Comt^ the country people have a proverb, " Quand le coucou chante et que le soleil lu (luit) Les chemins sont toue rassu {i.e. sont bientot sees)," 8 114 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIBDS. corresponding witli the Devonshire. saying that "the cuckoo comes to eat up the dirt," and thus makes the roads dry. On the other hand, in Switzerland, when the cuckoo approaches a town, especially if it enters it, it forebodes rain ; and in the Vosgea the name of " neige du coucou " is given to the snow which frequently whitens the mountain tops after the first note of the bird has been heard ; and in Canton Vaud they call the cold weather which often prevails in April " la Eebuse du coucou." A Welsh proverb runs, ",The first week of May Frights'the cuckoo away," — and the Germans declare that by that time his voice is frozen ; a change of voice to which Heywood alludes in his epigram " Of Use," 1.587, — " In Aprill, the koocoo can sing her song by rote, In June, of tune, she cannot sing a note ; At first, koo-coo, koo-coo, sing still can she do, At last, kooke, kooke, kooke ; six kookes to one koo." In the Basses Alpes it is believed that if the cuckoo sings in the direction of the north, there wiU be rain the next day,; if in the south, fine weather (RoUaud). 6. The cuckoo as prognosticating the harvest. In Germany and Switzerland, if the cuckoo sings after S. John's day, the vintage will be bad and the harvest scanty. In Norway, if it continued to utter its call after it had seen the first hayrick [cf. 3. (1)], it foretold coming famine, or hard times at least. The Norfolk country-folk say that if, on the last week before he goes, the .cuckoo keeps on the top of the oaks and makes a noise, it is the sign of a good harvest, but if he keeps on the lower branches, it is a bad sign. This mention of the oaks reminds us of Hesiod's statements 'that " when the cuckoo sings among the oak trees it is time to ploftgh " ; and " that if it should happen to rain three days together when the cuckoo sings among the oak trees, then late sowing will be as good as early sowing." In the "Bath Papers" (v. 266), so Mr. Hardy tells us, a Norwich farmer writes as follows : " The present appearance for the greatest appearance of barley is from the seed sown on the earliest sound of the cuckoo, and while the buds of blackthorn were yet turgid. " In some districts the following proverb is much used : — " Cuckoo oats and woodcock hay Make a farmer run away," which means (Notes and Queries, Ser. III., v. 450) " that if the spring is so backward that the oats cannot be sown till the cuokoo is heard, or the autumn so wet' that the latter-math crop of hay cannot be gathered in tall the wood- cocks come over, the farmer is sure to suffer great loss." In Norfolk there is a saying called " the WUby warning," frequently quoted by labourers, to this effect, — • " "WTien the weirling shrieks at night. Sow the seed with the morning light, But 'ware when the cuckoo swells its throat, Harvest flies from the moonoall's note." Here "the mooncall" is probably the nightingale. In the Gironde the country-folk say, " Quand lou cocut ben aux arbres deshuillat II y a petit de paUle, et beaucoup de blat " (i.e. ' When the cuckoo comes to bare trees, there will be little straw an much grain '). This corresponds with the English proverb given by Ray, — PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS, 115 " When the cucioo comes to the bare thorn,' Sell your cow and buy you corn ; But when she comes to the full bit, SeU your corn and buy you sheep." So the Welsh— " Os cto y g6g a'r berth yn llwm, i.e. > if thecuokoo sings when the hedge is brown, Gwerth dy GeSyl a phryn dy bwn. Bell thy horse and buy thy com. Os o^n y g6g a'r berth yu glyd, If the cuckoo sings when the hedge is green, Cadw dy Gefiyl a gwerth dy yd." Keep thy horse and sell thy corn.* ' The Servian kaiduks, however, according to Grimm (ii. 679), declare that " it betokens evil when the cuckoo comes too soon and cries out of the black (leafless) forest ; and good luck when it sings from the green wood. - But as regards the French and English sayings, they appear to refer not so much to the early arrival of the cuckoo, as to the lateness of the spring, which the •Servians also consider as beneficial to their crops. " When the cuckoo purls its feathers, the housewife should become chary of her eggs," is recorded by Mr. Hardy as a popular saying ; and seems to mean that when the bird's feathers become ruffled and awry, it is a sign of approaching cold. (3) We have already noticed the connection of the cuckoo with Freya as the divinity of spring, germinating showers, sunshine, and harvest ; but besides giving fruitfulnesa to the earth, this goddess also imparts to men a long life, prosperity, , and the joy of marriage, with its fruit — a numerous offspring. Hence it is that the cuckoo is invoked by those desirous of knowing how long they will have to live, how soon they will be married, and with how many children they will be blessed. a. The cuckoo as prognosticating length of Ufe. It was a custom in Yorkshire (Har'dy, 41) for children to sing round a cherry tree « (i^^Jj-qq^ cherry tree. Come down and tell me How many years afore I dee," And in Northamptonshire — " Cuckoo, cherry tree. How many ^ears am I to live ? One, two, three." Each child then shook the tree, and the number of cherries which fell betokened the sum of the years of its future life. This agrees with what Grimm (ii. 679) says, that " when the cuckoo Jias eaten his fill of cherries three times he leaves off singing." bo, too, in the west of Scotland, " the cuckoo, the first time you hear it in spring, cries once for every year you have yet to live." (Glasgow HeraU, Oct. 1869.) A similar superstition exists iif France, where in Franche Comt^ the bird is thus addressed- »Cuccou, '^ Bolotou, Kegaide sur ton grand liyre, , Comben i a d'enfes h vivre." (Bblotovi means a boy who robs birds' nests in order to make a meal off the eggs they contain. So the cackoo is called in North^nts "suck-egg." — Stem- berg's " Northamptonshire Glossary," 109.) In Switzerland the children cry — • " Guggu, ho, ho, Wie lang leben i no ?" 116 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. In Westphalia — ' ' Kukuk vam Heaven ' Wu lang sail ik noch leaven ? " to which, in Ditmarschen, are added the Unes— " Sett dy in de grbne Grastyt Un tell myn Jaerstyt." ' {i.e. ' Set thee in the green grass-tide and tell my year's tide.') In Lauenburg — "Kukuk, 'Cuckoo, Spekbuk, Fat-paunch, Ik bir dy ; I pray thee : Seg my dooh, Tell me now, Wo vael Joer How many years Law 'ik noch.'' I yet shall live.' (The last two are from Thorpe iii. 131.) In Swabia — "Kukuk, kukuk, Schrei mir meine Jahre an. Schrei mir sie in 'n Deekelkrabe (basket) Wie viel Jahr darf ich noch lebe.^' In some districts the rhyme runs, according to Grimm (ii. 676) — "Kukuk, beckenkneoht {vid. inf.) Sag mir recht, ■\yie viel jar ich leben soil." So, too, in modem Greek we have, koOko '/lov, kovkAki /iov, ki apyvpoKOVKdiia' fiov, voffovs XP""""^ ^^ ".^ f^ffw ; In Sweden they say — " Goker gra, ' Cuckoo grey, Saeg mig da, Tell me now, Uppa gvist, ■ Up on bough, Sant och vist, True and sure, Hur mansra Sr How many years Jag leva fjr ? " I have to live ?,' The same belief prevails in Poland a,ud Bohemia (Grimm ii. 679),, and in one of the old French poems of the cycle of " Renard the Fox," we find it existing in France in the thirteenth century. ("Le Roman du Renart," torn. iv. p. 9, V. 216, quoted by Rolland, p. 93.) b. The cuckoo has also the reputation of being able to tell maidens how many years they will remain unmarried. In England he is invoked with the lines — "Cuckoo, cherry tree. Good bird, tell me How many years I shall be Before I get married." In France (Rolland, p. 94) the young girls salute the bird thus — ,; " Coucou des villes Goucou des boia Comb^ ai z'y d'ann^ea • A me maria ?" PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 117 In Holsteiu the question is-^ . " Kukuk aoMer de Hecken Wo lang schall min Brut noch gaen de bleken ?" The answer to which is considered to ,be given directly the bird utters his harsh second note (or as they call it in Berwickshire, his " muck it out ") once between his usual cry. As many times as he has called " cuckoo " up to this, so' many years will the inquirer remain celibate. (Busch, 203.) In Oldenburg the girls ask, directly they hear the first call of the bird^ — "Kukuk in den Suxinenscheiu "Wo lange sohaU ick Jumfer sin ?" This belief is general throughout Germany. When the cuckoo is first heard in spring the young maidens interrogate him with the same rhymes that were quoted above ("Gbker gra," etc.), altering the last line into Jag ogift gar ? i.e., I shall ungiven go ? If he cries oftener than ten times they say he sits on a bejritched bough, and give no heed to his prophecies. ' . Ip connection with this may be mentioned the reason, as given in Denmark according to Mr. Horace Marryat (" Jutland and the Danish Isles," i. 270), why the cuckoo builds no nest of his own. — " When, in early springtime, the voice of the cuckoo is first heard in the woods, every village girl kisses her hand, and asks the question, ' Cuekoo ! Cuckoo ! when shall i be paarried ? ' and the old> folks,- borne down with age and rheumatism, inquire, 'Cuckoo! when shall I be released from this world's care ? ' The bird, in answer, con- tinues singing ' Cuckoo ! ' as many times as years will elapse before the object of their desires will come to pass. But as some old people live to an advanced age, and many girls die old maids, the poor bird has so much to do in answering the questions put to her, that the building season goes by ; she has no time to make her nest, but lays her egg in that of the hedgesparrow." In Bohemia they say that the Festival of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin used always to be held sacred even by animals ; and the birds left off building their nests on that day. The cuckoo, however, was an exception ; she .was there- fore cursed and deprived of her husband. Hence it is that she has no nest of her own, l?ut lays her eggs in that of a linnet or hedgesparrow. (Grohmann, 68.) c. Grimm ("D.M.," ii. 677) informs us that in Goethe's " Oracle of Spring" the cuckoo announces to a fond couple their approaching marriage, and the number of their children — which is also a Bohemian superstition. (4) Superstitions connected with the hearing of the cuckoo's first call. a. "In the maritime Highlands and Hebrides," says McGiUivray, "about the time of the arrival of the wheatear, every one is on the look-out for the cuckoo. Both birds are great favourites with the Celts, more especially the latter ; but both may be the harbingers of evil as well as of good, for should the wheatear be first seen on a stone, or the cuckoo first heard by one who has not broken his fast, some misfortune may be expected. Indeed,' besides the danger, it is considered a reproach to one to have heard the cuckoo while hun- gry, and of such a one it continues to be said that the bird has muted on him, ' ohae ia. chuaig an.' But should the wheatear be seen on a turf, or on the grass, or should the cuckoo be heard when one has prepared himself by re- plenishing his stomach, all will go well." In France, to hear, the cuckoo for the first time fasting is believed to make the hearer an idle do-nothing for thfe rest of the year (Pdrigord), or to numb his limbs for the same period (Canton de Loulay), and it is said of such a one that "le coucou I'a-t-attrapp^ ! " So in Somersetshire (N. and Q., Ser. V., vol. iii., p. 424), " When boys first hear 118 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIEDS. • the cuckoo they run away as fast as they can, = prevent their being lazy all the yeaj- after." In Germany the belief is that to hear the bird's ciy before a meal entails constant hunger for the next twelve months ; while in Denmark (Thorpe ii. 271), if a person sees the cuckoo for the first time in this same condition, it is said, "The cuckoo befools us." If it is a male person, he shall not find ary cattleor anything else he may seek after. If it is a girl, she must be on her guard against young men, lest she be befooled by them. If it is old folks, they have good reason to fear sickness." In Norway, if the maidens hear the bird sing before breakfast it is considered an evil omen (" Cambridge Antiquarian Communications," iv. 159). . b. Importance, too, is attached to the quarter or direction in which the _ cuckoo utters his first call. Thus, in Cornwall (" Choice Notes," p. 90), " If, ' on first hearing the cuckoo, the sounds proceed from the right, it signifies that you will be prosperous ; or, to use the language of the informant, a country lad, " Tou will go right vore in the world " ; if from the left, iU hick is before you. On the other hand, Mr.* Pengelly saya (Hardy, 42), " Cornishmen not only take it as a good omen to hear the cuckoo from the right, but also from before them ; to hear him, in short, on the ' starboard "Bow," as a eaUpr would say." Mr. lEirikr Magnusson, in his "Description of a Norwegian Calendar" ("Cambridge Antiquarian Communications," iv. 159), tells us . that if the cuckoo was heard ou May 1st in the north, it was a ndgavkr, ' death cuckoo,' and boded the hearer death ; if in the south, it was a saagamhr, 'seedcuckop,' and foretold good luck to harvest ; ifinthe west, itwasaiiiiyaMfe-, * wlll-cuckoo,* signifying that the hearer's will and wishes would be fulfilled ; if in the east, it was an aMgcmkr, ' guile-cuckoo,' hinting that the hearer's love would be responded to." / ■ c. The belief is almost universal in England and the Continent that if a person has money in his pocket when he first hears the cuckoo he will never be in want of it throughout the year. Should he, at the same time, indulge in a vrish, it will be gratified, provided it be within reasonable limits, if he turn the coins which he has in his possession (Somerset, Northants, Belgium, Swabia), or jingle them (Westphalia, Carinthia), or roll on the grass (Saxony — see Busch, 203) ; while in some places it is thought that if, in addition to money, he happen to have a knife with him, he will have good sport for the next twelve months (" Monthly Packet," New Series, vol. xix., p. 413). With regard to this connection of the cuckoo with money, it may be observed that Freya's tears were golden, that gold was named after them, and that Holla, with whom she stands in close relationship, bestowed the gift of weeping such tears — in other words, had the power of granting wealth and fortune. d. Various superstitions. At Wooler, in Northumberland, you are told, if you are walking on a hard road when the cuckoo first calls, the ensuing season will be full of calamity ; ■ but it you should stand on soft ground it is a lucky omen (Hardy, 3.9). In Scotland it is lucky to be walking when the cuckoo is first heard, sitting when the first swallow is seen, to see the first foal of the year walking in front of its dam : — " Gang and hear the gowk yell, Sit and see the swallow flee. See the foal Jifore it's mither's e'e, 'Twill be a thriving year with thee." ("Zoolo^st,"1094.) The firct time you hear the voice of the cuckoo, sit down on a bank, and, pulling the stocking off' the right leg, say — " May this to me, Now lucky be," • PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIKDS. 119 and then put it on again.- (" Cuckoo Cries," p. 8. By M. A.,I}enliani.) And Pliny attributes to the earth on which the right foot stands when the cuckoo is first heard, the virtue of keeping off fleas ; " Aliud est cuculo miraoulum, , quo quis loco piimo audiat illam, si dexter pes circumscribatur, ae vestigium id efFodiatur, nongignipulioes, ubicunque spargatur." ("Nat. Hist.,"xxx. 25.) In the west of Scotland, on hearing the cuckoo for the first time, pull off your shoes and stockings, and, if you find » hair on the sole 8f the left foot, it will be the exact colour of the hair of your future spouse. If no hair is found, then another year of single life must be endured " (Glasgow Herald, October, 1859). " I got up the last May morning," says the " Connoisseur," No. 56, " and went into the fields to hear the cuckoo, and when I pulled off jny left shoe I found a hair in it exactly the same colour with his." " When first the year, I heard the cuckoo sing. And call with welcome note the budding spring, I straightway set a-running with such haste, Deb'rah that won the smock scarce ran so fast. Tin spent for lack of breath, quite weary growu^ • Upon a rising bank I sat.adown, And doff'd my shoe, and by my troth I swear. Therein I spied this yellow frizzled hair, As like to Lubberkin's in curl and hue, As if upon his comely pate it grew. With mysharp heel I three times mark the ground. And turn me thrice, around, around, around — " writes Gay, in his " Sheijherd's Week " (Pastoral iv.) ; and the same super- stition prevails in Ireland, only in that country it is believed that the hair must be sought for under the right foot. (Carleton, ' ' Traits, etc., of the Irish Peasantry," vol. iv., p. 268.) In some of the north-western counties, and also in Norfolk (Hardy, 44), people believe that whatever they chance to be doing when they first hear the cuckoo they will do all the year. In Berwickshire, if the circumstances in which its note is first heard be attended to, they afford unerring signs whereby the secrets of a man's destiny for the ensuing 'year may be disclosed. In wha,tever direction he may be looking when its tones arrest him, there will he be on the anniversary of that day next year. If he be gazing on the ground, he is warned of an untimely fate. This is also common to Midlothian and Cornwall. (Hardy, 44.) To hear the cuckoo's first note when in bed betokens, so they say in Norfolk and also in Sussex, illness or death to the hearer or one of his family (" Norf. Arch. Orig. Pap." ii 301). In Westphalia (Busch, 203) the peasants, on hearing the cuckoo for the first time, roll over and over on the grass, and by so doing insure themselves against lumbago for the rest of the year. This is , considered all the more , likely to happen if the bird repeat his cry while they are on the ground. (5) The monotony of the cuckoo's song is proverbial. A " cuckoo tune " is to harp on one string, to weary by iteration. Mr. Hardy (p. 27) says that it early became a proverb in Scotland that " the goik hes na sang but ane." In Fer- guson's " Scots Proverbs," cited in Dean Ramsay's " Reminiscences," we have it " Ye bried of (take aiter) the gowk, ye have not a rhyme but ane " ; but the more modem saying is, " Ye're Uke the cuckoo, ye have but one song," which is a parallel to the German " Du singest immer einen Gesang, wie der Guck- guck. " So the French declare that the cuckoo is so proud of himself that he can do nothing but repeat his own name ; and in East Frieslaud the- children have a rhyme, " Kukuk, Breebuuk Rbppt sien eegen Naam ut," - ' 120 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. used when one of them indulges in silly boasting talk. In Tennyson's " Lover's Tale "' occurs the passage : — " We loved The sound of one another's voices more, Than the grey cuckoo loves his name." While in North 0-ermany the country boys and girls say that " Eiu Kuckuck sprach mit einer Staar Per aus dem Stadt entflohen war, " and asked what people thought . of the nightingale. " The whole tovm is praising her," said the starKng. " And the lark? " " Half the city are talking of her." " 'The blackbird ? " "I have heard a few say that they admire him." " Well, what do they say of me ? " "I never heard your name mentioned." "Then," said the cuckoo, "I must praise m.yself. Cuckoo!" There are many 'legaids to account for the bird's cry. The Germans say that he is a bewitched baker or miller boy, and thus has pale or meal-coloured feathers. In a dear season he robbed poor folks of their dough, and, when God blessed the dough in the oven, drew it out, plucked some off, and every time crieid out as he did so, " Gukuk " ! (' Look, look.') He was therefore punished, and turned into a thievish bird who continually repeats this cry. Tlusis why he is called Bedcerlenecht in Germany; though another legend (Grimm, ii. 729) also connects the two together. " Christ was passing a baker's shop, when He smelt the new bread,, and sent His disciples to ask for a loaf. The baker refused, but the baker's wife and her six daughters were standing apart, and secretly gave it. For this they were set in the sky as the Seven-stars, while the baker became the cuckoo (baker's man), and so long as he sings in spring,'from St. Tiburtius'a day (April 14th) to St. John's (June 24th), the Seven-stars are visible in heaven." Compare with this the Norwegian tale of Gertrude's bird (see "Green Woodpecker," ii. 1), which is so similar that it makes us ask with Simrock (" Handbuch der Deutschen Mythologie," pp. 504, 605), Was the cuckoo itself the Gertrude's bird (Gertrude being the representa- tive of Freya and Iduna) ? and has the latter been considered the red-headed woodpecker only through confusion with the Martin's bu-d (St. Martin and St. Gertrude being both connected with death and burial) ? This is the more likely, as the point of the story lies in the baking, and the woman's red hood is only thrown in as an accessory because of the bird's colour, whilst there was no necessity to invent the grey mealy plumage of the cuckoo. The Bohemians take the cuckoo for a transformed peasant woman who hid herself when she saw the Lord Jesus approaching, lest she should be obliged to give him a loaf. After He had gone by she put her head out of the window and cried " Cuckoo ! " whereupon she was at once changed into that bird. (Grohmann, 68.) Another legend connecting the cuckoo with the hoopoe will be found under the latter bird, p. 108, 109. They also say that she is a transformed maiden who is calling for her lost brother, or else proclaiming by her cry that he is found. This agrees with the Servian song, which tells how. the spirit of a dead man was detained in misery on earth because his sister was perpetually weeping at his grave. At last he became angry at her unreasonable sorrow, sfiA cursed her ; whereupon she was immediately changed into 'a cuckoo (Kukavitza), and now she has enough to do to lament for herself. Albanian folk-lore supplies us with more details. There were once two brothers and a sister. The latter accidentally killed one of them, by getting up suddtaly from her needlework and piercing him to the heart with her scissors. She and the surviving brother mourned ao much that they were turned into birds ; he cries out to the lost brother by night, " Gjon, Gjon," and she by day " Ku Ku, Ku'Ku," which means " Where are you ? " (J. A. Farrer, " Primitive Manners and Customs." The Norwegian children say the cock, the cufikoo, and the blackcock bought a cow between them, and settled that whichever of them woke first in the PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 121 morning should have the cow. The cock woke first, and called out, " Now the cow's mine ! now the cow's mine ! Hurrah ! '■ This woke up the cuckoo, who sang, "Half cow! Half cow!" Then the • blackcock woke — "A like share I A like share ! dear friends, that's only fair ! " So they were no wiser than they were before ! (Dasent, "Norse Tales," p. 211.) Tte old Sclavonians (Grimm, ii. 679) believed that Zywie {zyiiy= alive), the ruler of the universe, used to .change himself into a cuckoo, and declare to men the number of years they had to live. (See above, 3 a). (6) The most remarkable trait in the character of the cuckoo is its confiding the charge of hatching its eggs and rearing its young to some other bird, always much smaller than itself. In Scotland (M'Crillivray, sub Cuckoo) the species on which it thus imposes its progeny is generally the meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis') ; in England its eggs have been found in the nests of the hedgesparrow, redbreast, whitethroat, redstaijt, willow warbler, pied wagtail, meadow pipit, skylark, yellowhammer, chaffinch, greenfinch, and Imnet ; those of the hedgesparrow, pied wagtail, and meadow pipit being usually selected. The Border shepherds (Hardy, 24) declare that the hlame for this apparently unnatural alienation of the parent from her offspring does not attach to the female, but is really attributable to the male, who, if he had his way, would devour the eggs and drive his partner from the nest. To avoid this she conveys the egg out of his reach and deposits it in the home of some other bird. It is this depositing its offepriug with alien parents that has given rise to the connection between the cuckdo and cuckoldom. Originally, among the Hindus for instance (Gubernatis ii. 231), the male cuckoo was considered the faithless one, as they believed that it entered into an alliance with the strange female bird to which it afterwards confided the eggs. Later on, amongst the Romans, the derisive title " Curruca " was given to th^ paramour of the guUty wife (that being the name of the bird in whose nest the cuckoo's eggs were usually deposited) ; whUe afterwards, in the transition from classic to mediaeval periods, the application of ihe term coou or cuckold was transferred from the paramour to the unsuspicious husband. (7) The meadow pipit {Anthus praUusis — which see) is the cuckoo's constant companion in Ireland, Scotland, and the north- of England. In Devon and Cornwall the peasantry beheve (Gentleman's Magazine for 1796, p. 117) "that the cuckoo feeds on the eggs of other birds, and that the little bird as they call it, accompanying him (the Yunx torquiUa, wryneck or svunmer bird) seaj'ches for them for that purpose, and feeds him." This is entirely erroneous, as the wryneck gets its names of " cuckoo's mate, marrow, maiden," etc., not from any fondness for the cuckoo's society, but because it arrives and departs about the same time as that bird. Its Swedish name is Ooktita. Mr. Broderip, in his " Zoological Recreations," p. 75, says that in Herefordshire the rfed- backed shrike (Lanms coUurio) is called " cuckoo's maid " probably because it has been seen feeding a young cuckoo. In North Germany the hoopoe has the name of the " cuckoo's clerk or sexton," pointing, as Grimm observes, (" D. M." ii. 681) to old heathen traditions now lost, the hoopoe, by the way, being frequently connected with the cuckoo in folk taJes (see Hoopoe, p. 109), both being birds that were thought to have received their forms by metamor- phosis. The peewit or lapwing is also called in .Germany the " cuckoo's lackey. " (8) In the north of England and in Scotland, to send a person on a fruitless errand on the first of " April is called a " gowk's errand." Sometimes (Hardy, 39) the April fool is, the bearer of a missive containing this distich — " The first and second day of April, Hound (or hunt or send) the gowk anpther mile.'' The reply by parties too old or too experienced to be thus played on ia — " April gowks are past and gone, You're a fool and I am none." 122 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. • • At Wooler, in Northumberland, those who thus resisted being made " feul gowks " on " feul-gowk day," April 1st, replied :— ' " The gowk and the titlene sit on a tree, Ye're a gowk as weel as me." It seems likely that this phrase is derived from tie habit the euckoo has of changing its place so quietly and suddenly. Frequently, when children are anxious to catch a sight of the bird, and think that they are alfnost within reach of it, they hear its cry at a distance, and f oUow it, only tp be again deceived. It is in this character of a derider that, as Guberuatis remarks (ii. 233), when " children play at , hide-and-seek, they are accustomed in Germany and Italy, as well as in England, to cry out " Cuckoo " to him who is to seek them, in vain, as is hoped." Young cuckoos are stupid creatures, and from this trait in their nature may come the terms "gowk," a' simpleton, and "gawky," the corresponding adjective. Grimm ("D. M," ii 681) points out that as far back as the tenth century gouh has the meaning of fool, aiid Gauchsberg is equivalent to Narrenberg (' fool's mount '). Animals whose stupidity was proverbial of old are the ox, ass, ape, goat, goose, gowk and' jay. See Hardy (^26, 27) for an amusing anecdote as to the significatioij of a gowk's nest, quoted from Constable's Edirihurgh Magazine, September 1817. (9) The euckoo has given his name to many plants ; the real cuckoo flower being Cardamime pratensis, so called from its coming into bloom when the bird first begins to call. Other cuckoo flowers are the Zychms Jloscidi, the Lychnis diurna, or red-flowered campion, the cuckoojpint (Arwm macidatvm), the hare- bell, the Orchis mascvZa, and others. The wood-sorrel has the name of cuckoo bread, "because the cuokowes deligbt to feed thereon," and this is common to many languages. In French it is pain de coucou ; in Italian, pan cucidi ; in German, KuhuJcsbrot ; in Danish. giSge-syre ; in England, besides cuckoo-bread', it is called cuckoo-spice ; in Scotland, gowk's meat. (For an exhaustive list of flower lore connected with the cuckoo, see Hardy, 32-5.) The froth on plants, discharged by young frog-hoppers {Pytelus spumarius], is the cuckoo's or gowk's spittle, frog spit, toad spit, snake's spit, or wood-sear of England and Scotland ; the Kuknks- or Hexenspeichel of the Germans ; the Swiss guggerspeu, Danish giSgespyt, Norwegian trold-Kiaringspye, French crachMt de coucou. In Devonshire, boys take the insects in tlie spittle for cuckoos in their early stage ; and jonston, in his " History of the 'Wonderful Things of Nature," p. 174, teBs us that the grasshoppers (for so he considered them to be, following Isidore) "before the dog dayes when they hear the cuokowe sing, run upon her in troops' (it is to be remembered that they are her offspring), and get under her wings and kill her.", (For an account of the part the cuckoo spittle played in the trials of the famous " "Witches of Blockiia," see Broderip, " Zoological Recreations," p. 72.) (10) In the ancient pharmacopoeia the cuckoo was of great use. Beingapplied to the flesh in a hareskin it caused sleep, while the ashes helped the pain and moisture of the stomach, the epileptic, and those that had agues, being given in the flt. (Lovell's " Panzoologicomineralogia," p. 149.) (11) Miss Bume ("Shropshire Folk Lore," p. 222) mentions a Shropshire saying, " 'When it rains and the sun shines, the cuckoo is going to heaven." In Scotland, on the same occasion, children say " that the fairies , are baking, and the rain waters their bannocks " {N. ^ Q, Ser. I'V., v. 273). In Germany the combination is viewed with much disfavour, for then it is " Kermes in hell," or " poison is falling from the sky," or " the witches are making butter or pancakes," or " the devil is beating his grandmother ; he is laughing, and she is crying." PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 123 Order Steiges. • Family STRiGiDi;. 1. The following names are given indiscriminately to owls (A.-S. •tile = howlers). Howlet. Hoolet. Cf. Hidotte (France). Screech owl. Jenny howlet. 2. The cry of the owl foretells a change, if heard in bad weather. Hen'ce the Italian proverb, " Quand la aoigu&ta cria El temp briit el scapa via : " and the Sussex saying, " When owls whoop much at night, expect a fair morrow." 3. Owls are often nailed up on barn doors or walls. The meaning of this custom is now unknown in our own rural districts ; but in Germany the peasants will tell you it is done to avert lightning. The owl, it is to be observed, is a lightning bird. 4. The owl a baker's daughter. The following legend (alluded to by Shakespeare, Samlet, Act IV., so. v. :— : " They say the owl was a baker's daughter,") is related by Mr. Stauntpn, in his edition of Shakespeare's Plays. "Our Saviour went into a baker's shop where they were baking, and asked for some bread to eat. The mistress of the shop immediately put a piece of dough into the oven to bake for him, but was reprimanded by her daughter, who, insisting that the piece of dough was too large, reduced, it considerably in size. The dough, however, immediately afterwards began to swell, and presently became of an enormous size. Whereupon the baker's daughter cried out, ' WhBugh ! wheugh ! wheugh ! ' which owl-like noise, it is said, probably induced our Saviour, for her wickedness, to transform her into that bird." Mr. Waterton says his nursery maid used to sing two stanzas of an ode. which gave to the bird a nobler origin : — « " Once I was a moiiarch's daughter. And sat on a lady's knee : . But am now a nightly rover. Banished to the ivy tree. " Crying hoo hoo, hoo hoo, hoo hoo, Hoo ! hoo ! hoo ! my feet are cold ! Pity me, for here you see me. Persecuted, poor and old ! " • 124 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. (So in Haute Bretagne the peasants say that when " chouette " cries, ' c'est qu'elle a fret fes pieds.) While Mr. Nuttall declares that the north-country nurses made her out to be no less than the daughter of Pharaoh, and sang "Oh! 8 0, — I once was a king's daughter, and sat on my father's knee. But now I'm a poor hoolet, and hide in a hollow tree ! " In several German popular songs the owl laments that she is alone, and deserted in the forest. One tradition represents her as an old weaver spinning with silver threads. 5. a. A Breton legend (Luzel, " Rapports sur une mission en Bretagne," 4'^"« rapport, p. 203), gives the following reason for the nocturnal and solitary hahits of the owl. " Once upon a time all the birds gave each of them one of their feathers to the wren, who had lost his own ; the owl alone refused to take part in this act of charity. ' I,' he said, ' will never give up a single feather : the winter is coming on, and I fear the cold. ' ' Very well,' repHed the king ; ' thou, owl ! from this day forward shalt be the most wretched of birds : thou shalt always be shivering with cold, thou shalt never leave thy abode but by night, and if thou art daring enough to show thyself in the daytime the other birds shall pursue and persecute thee unsparingly.' And from that time the owl has never ceased to cry ' Hou ! hou ! ' as if he were nearly dead with cold. " 6. In " L'Artiste," Ser. III., vol. ii., p. 300, the tale is presented in another fornj. " It was necessary for a messenger to fetch fire from heaven to eSrth ; and the wren, weak and deUcate though he was, cheerfully undertook to perform the perilous mission. The brave little bird nearly lost his life in the undertaking, for during his flight, the fire scorched away all his plumage, and penetrated to the down. Struck with such unselfish devotion, the other birds, with one accord, each presented the wren with one of their feathers, to cover his bare and shivering skin. The owl alone, in philosophic disdain, stood aloof, and refused to honour, even with such a trifling gift, an act of heroism of which he had not been the performer. But this cruel insensibility excited against him the anger of the other birds to sach a pitch that they refused from that time to admit him into their society. And so he is compelled to keep aloof from them during the day, and only when night comes on does he dare to leave his melancholy hiding-place." Another reason for the owl's' love of night is given by Wolf (" Beitr. zur D. M.," ii 438). " The birds, wishing to procure for themselves a king, determined that whichever of them could fly the highest should be selected. The eagle had succeeded in the task, but when he was tirdd, the wren, who had perched on his tail, rose up and flew yet higher. For this deceit he was confined in a mousehole, and the owl appointed to guard the entrance. But whilst the other birds were taking counsel as to the, punish- ment to be inflicted, the owl went to sleep and the prisoner escaped. Never since has the owl dared to appear in the daytime." (See above, under Wren, p. 36). 6. Pnblic-liouse sign. The owl in the ivy-bush. A bush of ivy was supposed to be a favourite place for the Owl to rest in. The old dramatists abound in allusions to this : e.g. * " And, hke an owle, by night to go abroad. Roosted all day within an ivy tod." (Drayton.) In a masque of Shirley's, entitled The Triumph of Peace, 1633, one of the scenes represented a wild, woody landscape, " a place fit for purse taking," where "in the furthest part was scene an ivy-bush, out of which came an owle." (Hotten's 'Tlistory of Signboards," p. 223.) PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 125 J An old Puritan divine likens an Episcopalian priest to an owl in an ivy-bush in the following terms : — " For you plainly may see The owl's ivy signifieth his library, By which the bush blinded all the dark angels (church clergy) vrith the black evil, That they do not know the true God from the false devil." 7. Proverbial sayings. " You bring owls to Athens " — i.e., " carrying coals to Newcastle." " An ass is the gravest beast, the owl the gravest bird." " The owl is not accounted the wiser for living retiredly." " The owl thinks all her young ones beautiful." " Owl light," in the old writers, was equivalent to twilight ; so Taylor, water-poet, says — " When straight we all leap'd over-boord in haste. Some to the knees, and some up to the waste. Where sodanely 'twixt owlelight and the darke We pluck'd the boat beyond high-water marke." Genus Stbix. BAEN OWL {Strixflammea). 1. So called from its predilection for buUding ia barns, churches, ruins, etc. ; whence also Church owl (Craven). Ci.-Hibou d'eglise (France). 2. From the snowy whiteness of the under plumage and the light tawny yellow pf the upper parts are derived the names of White hoolet or White owl (General). Silver owl (Forfar). Fellow owl. The Gaelic term for this bird is Caillcbch-oidhche gheal=" white old woman of the night." 3. The barn owl is known by its shrill screech in the night and prolonged hiss in the daytime ; hence Hissing owl. Screech owl (General). A term also, but improperly, applied to the tawny owl {Syraium aluco). Roarer (Borders). 126 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRBS. 4. Familiar names. Billy wix (Norfolk). Jenny howlet (North Eiding). Madge howlet (Norfolk). Padge, Pudge, or Pudge owl (Leicestershire). 5. Also called Woolert, Oolert, or Owlerd (Salop). Hoolet (Lowlands). Hulote, or Hullat (Orkney Isles). Cherubim. Povey (Glojucestershire). Hobby owl (Northants). ' Gill howter (Cheshire ; Norfolk). From A.-S. jil = noctua. In Shropshire the young birds are called Gilly owlets. 6. The screech owl as a messenger of death. The common consent of all nations has decided that it is a bird of evil omen. In the twelfth book of the " JEneid," previous to the end of the ■ combat between Maes.s and Turnus, no sooner does Juturn^i hear its boding cry and see the flapping wings; than she despairingly utters — " alarum verbera uosco Letalemque sonum." Ovid, too, speaks, in the iifth book of the "Metamorphoses," of " Ignavus bubo, dirum mortalibus omen." So too in France, in Germany, in Italy, in England, its appearance forebodes misfortune, its shriek foretells woe and ill. Even in Borneo the screaiji of an' owl, if heard at night previous to going out to the jungle, is considered to be " a sign that sickness will follow if the design be pursued ; and it its screech be heard in front of a party on the war path, it is an evil sjgn, and they must return " (St. John, " Lite in the Forests of the Far East," i. 202). " In China," says Mr. Doolittle (" Social Life of the Chinese," quoted by Dennys, " Folk-lore of China," p. 35), "some say that its voice resembles the voice of a spirit or demon calling out to its fellow. Perhaps it is on account ■ of this notion that they so often assert having heard the voice of a spirit, when they may have heard only the indistinct hooting of a distant owl. Sometimes, the Chinese say, its voice sounds much like an expression for ' cbiggmg ' the grave. Hence, probably, the origin of a common saying, that when one is about tp die, in the neighboilrhood vrill be heard the voice of an owl, calling out ' dig, dig.' It is frequently spoken of as ' the bird which calls for the soul, or which catches or takes away the soul.' Some assert that it 'its cry is dull and indistinct, as though proceeding from a distant plaoe, it betokens the death of a near neighbour ; whereas, if its notes are clear and distinct, as it proceeding from a short distance, it is a. sure harbinger of the death of a person in a remote neighbourhood, — the more distinct the voice, the more distant the individual whose decease is indicated, and the more indistinct the voice, the nearer the person whose death is certain ! It is a common saying that this bird is a transformation of one of the servants of , PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 127" the ten kinga of tlie infernal regions — i.e., is a devil under the guise of a bird. It is also frequently referred to as ■ A constable from the dark land.' " 7. The owl as connected -with birth. An ancient belief prevailed in England that if an owl appeared at a birth, it foreboded ill luck to the infant. Shakespeare alludes to this (^Senry VI., Part III., Acfy. so. vi.), where the King, addressing Gloucester, says— "The owl shrieked at thy birth, an evil sign." In the south of France there is an idea that if an owl shrieks when perched on the chimney of a house in which " une f emme enceinte " Ues, the child will ' • be a girl. Others say 'that its cry near a village shows that a birth wiU soon ■ take place in one of the dwellings. In Berne it is believed that the screech of an owl foretells either the birth of a child or the death of a man. 8. The owl in magic. No witch's charm could be efficacious, unless an owl, or a portion of an owl, was an ingredient. Horace's witch, Canidia, used its plumage in "her incanta- tion ("Epod. Lib." ode v.) : — . • " Et unota turpis ova ranse sanguine, Plumamque nocturnse strigis." Ovid, too, mentions it, referring to the potion prepared by Medea. And among our own poets Ben Jonson, in his Masque of QUemes, sings how " The screech owl's eggs and the feathers black, The blood of the frog and the bone in his back, I have been getting, and made of his skin A purset, to keep Sir Cranion in." While the vritches in Macbeth were careful to introduce the " owlet's wing 'i into the bubbling caldron. (Act IV., sc. i.) 9. The owl as the bird of wisdom. " The owl was sacred to Athene, the goddess of wisdom, because she sees in darkness : the flight of the bird of night was, therefore, for the Athenians, a ,sign that the goddess who protected their city was propitious." Longfellow ■ has a good word to say for him, in " Hyperion " : " The owl is a grave bird — -a, monk who chants midnight mass in the great temple of nature — ap anchorite — a pillar saint — a very Simon Stylites of his ueigh"boiirhood " : and who does not remember Tennyson's lines^ " Alone and warming his five wits. The white owl in the belfry sits " ? It is true that the five wits were generally considered to be equivalent to the five senses ; so " I comforte the wyttys five. The tastying, smelling and herynge, I refresh the sighte and felynge. To all creatures alyve." • (_Fyve Elements : an Interlude.) But in his 141st Sonnet Shakespeare distinguishes between wits and " But my five vrits nor my five senses can Dissuade one foolish heart from serving thee " — ^ 128 • PEOVINCIAL NAMES GF BRITISH BIRDS. the five wits being, according to Staunton, " common wit, imagination, fantasy, estimation, memory " : and who would deny an owl the possession of these ? (It may be noticed that the five wits, or five senses, are illustrated in Bunyan's allegory of "The Holy "War" ; and in the "Aucien Biwle" the heart's wardens are the five wits— sight and hearing, tasting and smelling, and the feeling of every limb.) Family Asionid^e. Genus Asio. LONG-EARED OWL {Asio otus). 1. So called from the elongated tufts of feathers on its head; whence also the names Long-ears (Berks). Horn-coot. Horned owl. Cf. Ghoue cornerotte (France), Homeule (Germany). Hprnie oolet, or hoolet (Stirling ; East Lothian). 2. Superstitions respecting the long-eared owl. "In Sicily,'' says M. Gubernatis, vol. ii., p. 249, "the horned Owl (the homed moon), jacobu, qr ohiovu, or chi6, is especially feared. The horned owl sings near the house of a sick man three days before his death ; if there are no sick people in the house, it announces to one at least of its inhabitants that he or she will be struck with squinanoy of the tonsil. The peasants in ' Sicily, when in spring they hear the lamentation of the horned owl for the first time, go to their master to give notice of their intention of leaving his service ; whence the proverb — . " Quannu canta lu chib Cu' avi patruni, tinta canciar lu p6." An omelette made of this bird's eggs is believed in Belgium to be a remedy for drunkenness. 3. Folk- lore. In the neighbourhood of Bordeaux, the country-people throw a pinch of salt into the fire on hearing the cry of this bird, to counteract any evil effects it might portend. (Vioomte de Mdtivier, p. 433.) 4. The long-eared owl in Christian art. A bas-relief in the church of Puyp^roux (Cbarente) represents a long-eared owl crowned, on horseback ; holding with one hand the bridle, in the other a lance. Opposed to him is a man having a shield on his left arm, who attacks the owl with a sword. On the ground lie three heads. The warrior's shield is PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 129 rounded at one end and pointed at the other ; he is clothed in a tunio, reaching juat short of the knee. This represents the strife between man and Satan, a subject of continual occurrence in mediaeval symbolism. The crowned" owl is the prince of darkness, the heads or naked bodies signify souls. (Michon, " Statistique de la Charente," p. 266.) SHORT-EARED OWL {Asia hraohyotvs). Various names. Hawk owl. So called from its small head aiid habit of looking for food during the day. Mouse hawk. Moss owl (rorfar) — i.q. Mouse owl. Brown yogle (Shetland Isles). Greyyogle „ „ Red owl (Dartmoor). From the pale orange of its under plumage. . Fern owl (Ireland). Woodcock owl (Berks ; N'orfolk ; Cornwall ; Ireland). Because it comes in October, and leaves in March, with the woodcock. &enu8 Syrnium. TAWNY OWL {Syrnium aluco). 1. So called from its reddish-brown colour ; whence also Tawny hooting-owl (Salop). Brown owl, or brown hoolet. 2. ifames given from its hooting cry : — Ullet, or hoolet, Jenny howlet. Billy, or gilly, hooter (Salop). Hoot owl (Craven). 'Ollering owl (Sussex). Screech owl. Improperly applied to this species. 3. From hiding in the woods during the day-time, and reposing in trees, it has received the names Wood owl. Ivy owl. B.eech owl. 9 130 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 4. Also called Ferny hoolet. Because sometimes it nests in bracken. The Gaelic name is cailleach oidhche, i.e. "old woman of the night." In the neighbourhood of Chatillon-sur-Seine, according to M. RoUand, it is called Choue de iois, or Ohoue d'Auvergne, from the following reason :— r"^Once upon a time, an Auvergnat, who had lost his way in a dense wood, heard the cry of the Hulotte (the usual name for this bird in France), and thought, it was the voice of God (Dieu). So he shouted, ' Mon Dieu ! Mon Dieu ! I am lost in the forest ; help me to get out I ' and endeavoured to turu his steps in the direction whence the voice seemed to sound. The bird flew from tree to tree, and drew on the luckless traveller farther and farther, till day dawned, and it ceased its cry." This reminds us of a similar story current, under dilferent forms, in many English counties. One version, taken from Jfotes and Queries, Ser. V., vol. i., p. 433, runs as follows (the scene being Earl Bathurst's park, near Cirencester) : "More than fifty years ago, a local 'character,' named Robert Hall, was returning home through the woods late one night, and lost his way. ' Man lost ! ' shouted the frightened traveller. ' Whoo I whoo ! ' cried the owl. ' Bobby Hall ; lost in the Three Mile Bottom ! ' replied the man. This went on for hours. The story reached the ears of the townspeople, and ' Bobby HaU ' was famous ever after." 5. The night crow. (3 Henri/ VI., Act. V., sc. vi. ; Leviticus xi. 16, Welsh version ; the English has " night hawk.") Pugh, in his Welsh Dictionary (1832), under the word DeUuan, says that the " corpse bird " (by which name the night crow of Leviticus xi. 16, Welsh version, is known in Wales) is the Brown owl. One rhymer wrote of that bird — " The corpse bird with his dog's nose " — /.e., its sense of smell is so acute that it scents afar off, as does a dog, the trail of its prey. (iVI and Q., Ser. V., vol. i., p. 115.) Genus Bubo. EAGLE OWL {Bubo ignmus). 1. So called from its superior size and strength, which rendered it the rival of the royal bird. Other names are ^ Stock owl (Orkney Isles). , From its habit of pressing against the stem (stock) of a tree with unrujBed feathers, so as to assimilate itself to the stump, and elude notice. Cat ogle (Orkney Isles). Norw. Kaiugl — from its similarity in habits and appearance to the cat. They pursue the same prey (mice) by night ; and the owl'a round white head, PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 131 with tuffa resembling ears and eyes gleaming bright in the darkness, gives it an additional resemblance to pussy. The old French name for this bird was " Grand Due," from a tradition that it " acted twice a year as leader or guide (cJwc) to the flocks of quails at their periods of migration." So the quatrain runs : — ' ' Le Duo est dit comme le conducteur D'autres oyseaux, quand d'un lieu se remuent. Comme Bouffons ohangent de gestes, et muent, Ainsi est-il folastre et plaisanteur. " Mr. Broderip tells us that the French falconers turned him out with the appendage of a fox's brush, in order to catch the kite that was sure to fly after him. 2. Folklore. When Agrippa, who had fallen into disfavour with Tiberius, was arrested at Caprese, an eagle owl was sitting on the branches of ,ii tree to which he was tied. A (^erman augur, who was present, thereupon prophesied that he would be released and would become king of the Jews — adding, however, that when he saw that owl again, his death would be near. An'diso it came to pass ; for, when sitting on his throne in state at Csesarea (Acts xii. 21), he cast his eyes upwards and beheld an owl perched on one of the cords which ran across the theatre. Recognising the portent .of ill, he fell back smitten with disease, and in five days was dead. Among the Tartars this bird was highly honoured and esteemed, and its feathers worn in their caps to insure success in war. They attributed the preservation of their chief, Genghis Khan, from his enemies, to the fact of an eagle owl settling over the place where he was hiding from his pursuers, who passed by, believing that it would never rest quiet if any man was near. (Broderip, " Zoological Recreations," p. 97.) Ord&r ACCIPITEES. Family Falconidjb. Qenus Circus. MAS.SH HAS.S.IEB {Circus ceruginosus), 1. So called from being generally found in the neighbourhood of bogs and marshes, and from its preying on and destroying (harrying) fish, reptiles and aquaitic birds ; whence also Marsh or Moor hawk ; Moor buzzard. Cf. Busard de marais (France) ; Rohrweih (Germany). Bog gled (East Lothian). ' Duck hawk ; Snipe hawk (South of Ireland). 2. Names given to it from its colour. Dun pickle (Wilts) : obsolete. Brown hawk (Ireland). 132 PROVINCIAE NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Bald buzzard (Essex). White-headed harpy. 3. Various names. Puttock. Kite (Ireland). Namea improperly applied. 4. Weather prognostic. It used to be said in Wilts that these birds alighted in numbers on the downs before rain. I HEN HARRIER {Circus cyaneus). 1. Also called "Hen driver," two synonymous titles: for " Harrier," see above, under Marsh harrier. 2. The male of this species is of a greyish-blue colour ; hence the names Blue hawk (East Lothian ; Wicklow). Blue kite (Scotland). Called in- Wales " Baroud-glSs," which has the same meaning. Blue gled (Scotland). Blue sleeves (ditto). Grey buzzard (Hants). White hawk, or kite (Donegal). Miller. White aboon gled (Stirling). 3. The plumage of the female is composed of various shades of dark-brown ; hence she is called Ringtail (East Lothian, where it is applied to both sexes). Prom the brown bar on the tail. Brown kite. Brown gled (Scotland). 4. Various names. Paller. Katabella (Orkney Isles). Dove hawk. Sea-gull hawk (Oonnemara). Called in France " I'oiseau de Saint Martin," as it makes its passage through that country about November 11th (St. Martin's day). " In the Hebrides it is said of any one, should he be more than ordinarily fortunate on a certain day, that he must have seen the ' clamhanluch ' (from damhan, a hawk, and luch, a mouse) or hen harrier."' (*' Zoologist," 1006.) PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 133 Genus Buteo. BUZZAHS {Buteo vulgaris). — O. F. Buse, Busard. 1. Also called Puddock, or Puttock (Eastern and Midland counties). A name'also applied to the kite ; from " poot " (i.q. Poult), short for " pullet," and " ook," corruption of " hawk." Bald kite. Kite (Ireland). Goshawk (ditto). Buzzard hawk (Forfar). Gled (North Scotland) : i.e. Glider ; from A.-S. glidam, to glide. 2. Weather prognostic. The cry of the buzzard is supposed to foretell rain ; so Clare writes : — " Slow o'er the wood the puttock sails ; And mournful, as the storms arise, His feeble note of sorrow walls, ^ To the unpitying, frowning skies. '' ("Village Minstrel," i. 96.) 3. The saying, "a blind buzzard," or " as blind as a buzzard," does not refer to the' bird of that name, which is extremely quick-sighted, but rather to the beetle, from the buzzing sound of its flight. Compare the French expression, " ^tourdi comme un hanneton." Nares, sub voc, says that all night-moths as well as beetles were thus called familiarly in his childhood. Genus Aquila. GOLDEN EAGLE (Aquila chrysmtos). 1. Also called Black eagle. Eingtailed eagle. So called from the dark-grey tail being barred with brownish-black. The name Golden eagle seems to have been given from the •golden-red tinge of the head and neck, and also from its yellow feet. 2. Nest of the eagle. Called " aerie, " French aire, which Littr6 (deriving from the Low Latin area) defines as " surface plane de rocher oti I'aigle fait son nid, et par extension, nid des grands oiseaux de proie." ' 134 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 3. Sight of the eagle. The eye of the eagle is so quick that the expression " eagle-eyed " has become proverbial. It was believed that she could gaze upon the sun, undazzled,,and compelled her young to stand the test before they were fledged, to prove if they were degenerate or not. Robert Chester refers to this in hia " Love'B Martyr," p. 118 : " She brings her birds being yong into the aire, And sets them for to looke on Phosbus light, But if their eyes with gazing chance to water, Those she aooounteth bastards, leaves them quight." 4. Rejuvenescence of the eagle. There is an old legend that when the bird begins to feel advancing age it plunges into the sea or into a fountain, from which it rises with new life" and strength, (Spenser, " Faerie Queene," Bk. I., cant, xi., st. 34), writes : " At last she saw, where he upstarted brave Out of the well wherein he drenchfed lay ; As eagle, fresh out of the ocean wave, Where he hath lefte his plumes all hory gray. And deckt himselfe with fethers youthly gay ; Like eyas-hauke up mounts unto the skiesj His newly budded pineoiis to assay, . And marvelles at himselfe, stil as he flies.'' 5. Damian (Epist. ii., 18, 19) adds that, before immersion, it so places itself in the focus of the sun's rays ("ad circulum solis "), as to set its wings on fire, and' in this way to consume the old feathers. Rabbi David (" Comment. Esaiae," cap. xiv.) adds, that when it delays the operation too long it has not strength to rise from the water, and is .frequently drowned. Albertus Magnus (on the veracious authority of Jorachus and Andelinus) vprites as follows : " TTiey say that an old eagle, at the period the young ones are fledged, as soon as she has discovered a clear and copious spring, flies directly upwards even to the third region of the air, which we term the region of meteors, and when she feels warm, so as to be almost burning, suddenly dashing down and keeping her wings drawn back, she plunges into the cold water, which by the astringing of the external cold increases the internal heat. She then mses fronj the water, flies, to her nest, and nestling under the wings of her warm young ones melts into perspiration, and thence vrith her old feathers she puts off her old age, and is clothed afresh ; but while she under- goes the renovation, she makes prey of her young for food." He adds, " I can only consider 'this as a miraculous occurrence, since in two eagles which I kept,,! I observed no changes of this sort ; for they were tame anddocile, and moulted in the same manner as other birds of prey." This old legend seems to be referred to in Ps. ciii. 5 — " makidg thee young and lusty as an eagle," com- menting on which S. Augustine refers to another strange belief — viz., " that since the upper mandible of th? eagle's bill, as she becomes old, grows over the under one and prevents its opening, so that the bird can no longer feed, slie seeks out a rock or rough stone on which she rubs her beak, and by etriking off the obstructive part, recovers her strength and power of feeding." 5. The eagle in art. a. The eagle is given to S. John as a symbol of the highest inapiiatipnf>| " because," as S. Jerome says, " he ascends to the very throne of God." -* h. It is also the emblem of SS. Bertulph, Medard, and Servatiua ; of S. Bertulph, abbot of Rentrey in Flanders, and of S. Medard, bishop of PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIEDS. 135 Noyon, bepause these saints, when overtaken by storms, were protected by the outspread wings of an eagle ; of S. Servatius, bishop of Tongres, because this bird sheltered him from the blaadng rays of the sun when sleeping by the wayside. 6. The eagle in heraldry. It is, generally speaking, the symbol of majesty and power. Austria has a two-headed ■ eagle, one for the eastern and one for the western empire ; claiming to be the representative of the Caesars of Bon^e. The double- headed^or imperial etigle is also borne by Russia, who added the kingdom of Poland to her own. The crest of the earls of Derby is an eagle with wings extended, or preying on an infant in a kind of crsdle, at its head a sprig of oak, all proper. This is derived from the family of Latham, and the following legend is told to account for its origin: — "In the reign of Edward III. Sir Thomas Latham, ancestor of the house of Stanley and Derby, had only one legitimate child, a daughter, but at the ^ame time he had an illegitimate son by a certain Mary Oscatell. This child he ordered to be laid at the foot of a tree on which an eagle had built its nest. Taking a walk with his lady over the estate, he contrived to br;ng her past this place, pretended to find the boy, took him home, and finally prevailed upon her to adopt him £^s their son. This boy was afterwards called Sir Oscatell Latham, and con- sidered the heir to the estates. Compunction or other motive, however, made the old nobleman alter his mind and confess the fraud ; and at his death the greater part of his fortune was left to his daughter, who afterwards married Sir John Stanley. At the adoption of the child, Sir Thomas had assumed for crest an eagle upon wing regardant ; this, out of ill feeling of the Stanley family towards Sir Oscatell, was afterwards altered into an eagle preying upon a ' child." Unfortunately, as Mr. Picton has pointed out {Notes and Queries, Ser. V., V. 2 — i), the legend bears absurdity on its face. The eagle bearing a shield, emblazoned or, on a chief indented az. three bezants, is found on a seal of the father of the Sir Thomas to whom the legend attributes it. The legend itself is as old as.the time of King Alfred, to whom a similar incident is ascribed. 7. Eagle's feathers. " Eagle's feathers will not lie with any other feathers, but consume them which lie with them " (" The Wedding Garment," Lond. 1614). 8. The eagle stone. This, which was supposed to be found in the nest of an eagle, was red, or black spotted with yellow in colour, and believed to bring good fortune to the lucky possessor ; also to be of sovereign virtue in cases of pregnancy. So, in the " Mercurius Rusticus," we read that a cock eagle's stone was stolen from a certain house, for which thirty pieces had been ofiered by a physician. Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, so Pliny (xxxvii. 1) tells us, had one of these gems in a ring, in which were to be seen the nine Muses and Apollo with his lyre, not engraved by art, but " sponte naturse ita disourrentibus maculis." 9. There is an Irish tradition that Adam and Eve still exist as eagles in the island of Innis Bofln, at the mouth of Killery Bay, in Galway. 10. An old French naturalist (Aneau, " Description Philosophale de Nature," Paris, 1571) tells us that the eagle wages continual war with the wren and the tree creeper {Certhea familiaris), the latter of which troubles him sorely, inas- much as, when he Imows that the eagle is absent from the nest, he enters it and breaks all the eggs. (For the enmity between the eagle and the wren see under Wren, ii. 1.) 136 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Genus HALiiBTUS. WHITE-TAILED EAGLE {Hdicetus alhiciUa)'. Also called Sea eagle. Erne (Shetland, Orkney, Isles). ' . Cf. A.-S. Earn; Breton, Er ; Danish, Oem. In Norway Ijliis bird is beUeved, before attacking cattle, to throw dust into their eyes, and so, by blinding, make them an easy prey. An old writer describes the process thus : " When she laboureth to drive the Hart headlong to ruine, she gathereth much dust as she flieth, and, sitting upon the Hart's horns (!), shaketh it into his eyes, and with her-wings beateth him about the mouth, untiU at last the poore Hart is glad to fall fainting to the ground" (Swan's " Speculum Mundi," p. 384). Qenus Astub. GOSHAWK — i.e. Goose-hawk {Astur podumhariii^). To the male goshawk, as well as to the male peregrine, the name " tercel " (see under Peregrine Falcon) was applied by fal- coners ; but in the case of the latter the epithet of " gentil " or " gentle " was added, because being a long-winged hawk it was considered the more noble of the two. The French name is Autour (Ital. Astore, Lat. Astur), or "Starred bird" (from Greek dcn-^p), as its plumage is starred with brown and red spots. Oenus Acci-PITEE. SPARROW-HAWK {Accipiter nism). Called Spur-hawk or Spar-hawk in Aberdeenshire, Cf. Spmr- hok (Sweden), Spar/el (Brittany). 1. The slaty blue or leaden colour of upper parts of the body has caused to be applied to it the names Blue hawk (Berks; Bucks; Oxon; West Riding; Stirling; East Lothian). Blu6 merlin (Perth). 2. Also called Maalin — i.e. Merlin ^Shetland Isles). G;leg hawk (Renfrew). " Gleg " = quick-eyed. Pigeon hawk. PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 137 3. The name given by the old falconers to the male sparrow- hawk was "Musket" (Fr. Motiohuet, Ital. Mosquetto, Dutch Mosket), either from its colour " gris de mouche," or from its small size. So we find, in the Merry Wives of Windsor, Mrs. Ford addressing Falstaff's page with " How now, my eyas musket ? " Here, as Mr. Harting observes (" Ornith. of Shakespeare," pp. 74, 75) "eyas" signifies a nestUng; hence Mrs. Ford probably intended to imply no more than we should mean by a " perky Uttle feUow." An " eyas " is probably a mispronunciation of " a niais," which is a French word for a bird taken from the nest — nid (^Niaso, Italy ; Nestling, Germany). 4. The higher a sparrow-hawk flies, so the Bretons say, the better can he see the small birds which are on the ground. He cries to them — " Sauvez-vou3 oil vous voudrez, Plus je serai haut, mieux je vous verrai ! " They also declare that these hawks flap their wings to lull the small birds to sleep. Genus Milvus. KITE {Mihms ictinus). A.-S. Cyta. 1. From its forked tail this bird has received the names of Fork tail. Crotch tail (Essex). " Crotch " = a post with a forked top, used in building. 2. Also called • Gled, Glead, or Greedy gled (Salop; North o? England; Scotland). " Kites and buzzards," says White in his " Selbome," " sail round in ciircles with wings expanded arid actionlesB ; and it is from their gliding manner that the former are still called in the north of England ' gleads ' or ' gleds,' from the Sa^on glidam., to glide." (See under Buzzard.) Sir Walter Scott writes in " Guy Mannering'' : — " When the gled's in the blue cloud The laverock lies still." Puttock (see under Buzzard). " A puttocke, set on pearch, fast by a falcon's side. Will quickly show itselfe a kighte, as time hath often tried." (Gasooigne, " Councell to Duglas^ Dive.") 138 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 3. Folk lore of the kite. The kite, so the Czechs believe, is not allowed to drink from a spring, but only from the pools formed by the rain in the clefts of rocks. Hence in dry summers he ia sorely troubled with thirst, and flies aloft, calling " Pit ! pit! pit ! "' (i.e. to drink ! to drink ! to drink !) thus intreating God to send refreshing showers. (Grohmarm, p. 66.) See Green Woodpecker, ii. 2, h. The kite is also considered in Bohemia to be the bearer of messages from the devil to the village sbrcerers ; he flies in and out of their houses by the < chimney.. A curious peculiarity of this bird is noticed in the Winter's Tale, IV. iii,, where Autolycus says, " My traffic is sheets ; when the kite builds, look to lesser linen " — ^meaning that his practice was to steal sheets, leaving the smaller linen to be carried away by the kites, who will occasionally carry itoff to line their nests (Singer's "Shakespeare," iv. 67, quoted by Dyer, "Folk Lore of Shakespeare," p. 124). Mr. Dyce ("Glossary," p. 243) quotes the following remarks of Mr. Peck on this passage :— " Autolycus here gives us to understand that he is a thief of the first class. This he explains by an allu- sion to an odd vulgar notion. The common people, many of them, think that if any one can find a kite's nest, when she has young, before they are fledgisd, and sew up their back doors, so as they cannot mute, the mother kite in com- passion to their distress, will steal lesser linen, as caps, cravats, rufBes, or any other such snaall matters as she can best fly with, from off the hedges where they are hanged to dry after washing, and carry them to her nest, and there leave them, if possible to move the pity of the first comer to cut the thread and ease them of their misery." Genus Peenis. HONEY BUZZARD {Pemis apivorus). The Welsh name for this bird is Bod y mel, or Honey kite. Bee kite, or Bee buzzard, which corresponds with the Latin title, would be more suitable, as the bird does not feed on the honey, but on the insect which produces the honey. Also called Capped buzzard. Genus Falco. PEREGRINE FALCON (Falco per egrinus). A name given to it from its wandering habits. Of. Faucon peUrin (France) ; Wander/alk (Germany). 1. From the dark bluish-grey of its upper plumage it is called Blue-backed falcon. Blue hawk (Mid Scotland ; Ireland). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 139 2. Prom its prey Gtame hawk (Scotland generally). ' Duck hawk. 3. Various names. Saker — i.e. sacker or plunderer (obsolete). Cliff hawk (Devon ; Cornwall ; Ireland). Prom the place of its nest Hunting hawk (East Lothian ; the Cheviot Hills). Stock hawk (Shetland Isles). Paakin — i.e. Palcon hawk (Aberdeen). Goshawk (Ireland). Improperly applied. The true Goshawk {Astur palumbarius) is short-winged. In falconry the male peregrine was called the tiercel, tassel, or tercel, gentle ; the former name being given to it because it was about- one-third smaller than the falcon, by which title the female was known ; the latter from its tractable disposition. Cf . Terzuoh (Italy) ; Terzelot (Germany) ; Ta/rsel (Holland). HOBBY {Falco suhhuteo). — Pr. Hohereau. Prom the Latin albus, the whitish tint of its plumage dis- tinguishing it from the other species of hawks, whose colour, generally speaking, is dark. The formation of the name "hobby" may be seen from the following Prench provincial names : — Alhwn (Old Provengal), Auhier, Aubreau (Old Prench), Oiereau, Hohereau (Mod. Prench). Called Alhanella (Italy), Hoherell (Brittany), Weissbach (Swabia). Vanrwinged hawk (Hants). DttERLIN {Falco asalon). Cf . EmerUlon (Prance), Smerlo (Italy), Schmerl (Germany). 1. Prom the greyish-blue of its upper plumage it is called Blue hawk (North Eiding). Small blue hawk (Stirling). 2. From its habit of sitting on a bare stone or piece of rock it has received the names of Stone falcon (Jforth Wales ; Scotland). Rock hawk, Stone hawk. 140 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BBITISH BIRDS. 3. Various names. Sparrow-hawk (Scotland). Hobby (Shetland Isles). Hawk kestrel (Do.). KEST'R'EL (TinnuTiculus alavdarius). - .| Of. Crescelle, Crescerelle (France) ; Cristel (Burgundy) ; Crista- ' ■ij rello (Naples). So ;i Creshawk (Cornwall). i 1. From its well-known habit of remaining stationary (stand- jl in-gale), hovering and poising itself over a particular spot, are derived the names Stand hawk (West Riding). Stannel or Stanchel. Stannel hawk. StonegaU, or Steingale. Windhover (South and West of England). Hoverhawk (Berks ; Bucks). Fleingall, i.e. Fly in gale. Vanner hawk, Wind fanner. From the fanning movement of the wings. Windcuffer (Orkney Isles). Windsucker (Kent). y] " Kistrilles or windsuokers, that filling themselves with winde fly against -.It the wind evermore " — Nashe, ' ' Lenten Stuffe " (in Harleian MisceUany, vi. 170). !' Windbibber (Kent). ; A Welsh name is Cudyll y gwynt, i.e. wind hawk. 2. Names given from the red tint of its plumage. Red hawk (Stirling). • i Cf. Eousset mohet (Luxembourg) ; Cudyll cdch (Wales). The ] Gaelic title is Clamhan ruadh, i.e. red kite. 3. Various names. Kite (Salop). Keelie (neighbourhood of Edinburgh). From its loud, shrill oiy. Blood hawk (Oxon). From the blood-red colour of the eggs. (C. M. Prior.) Maalin, i.e. Merlin (Shetland Isles). Sparrow-hawk (Ireland). Called in Norway Taarn/cdk, or tower falcon. PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 141 4. Kestrel and sparrow-hawk. " The aparrow hawk," says Lupton in his " Thousand Notable Things," " is a fierce enemy to all pigeons ; but they are defended by the castrel, whose sight and voice the sparrow hawk doth fear — which the pigeons or doves know well enough, for where the castrel is, from thence will not the pigeons go (if the sparrow hawk be nigh), through the great trust she hath in the castrel, her defender." The Bohemians believe the kestrel to be a bird of good omen. He shows them the best watering places in the rivers and pools, and if a robber approaches any one who has fallen asleep out of doors, wakes the sleeper with his warning voice. Hence he is the dread of forest thieves and poachers. (Grohmann.) Genus Pandion. OSPREY (Pamdion halicetus). From the Latin ossifraga, i.e. bonebreaker, because fragments of bone are found in its stomach. 1. Also called Pishing hawk or fish hawk (Scotland ; Shetland Isles)'. Cf. Fischhabicht (Germany). Mullet hawk. Eagle fisher. Cf. Aigle peeheur (Prance). Bald' buzzard. From its white head and feathers. Cf. Balbusard (France). Water eagle (Old Scotch). Equivalent to the Gaelic lolair- Called in Italy Angiusta plrmiheria, i.e. the leaden eagle, because its sudden descent on its prey is like the fail Of lead. The Welsh names are Pysg eryi, i.e. fish eagle, and Gwahh y i, i.e. sea hawk. 2. Shakespeare alludes to the ospreyin CoriolanuSjAcb IV. sc. vii. Aufidius loq. " As is the osprey to the fish who takes it By sovereignty of nature." " Here," says Mr. Staunton, " the image is founded on the fabulous power attributed to the osprey of fascinating the fish on which it preys. Thus in Peele's play called The Battle of Alcazar (1594), Act II., sc. i. ; " I will provide thee of a princely ospray, That, as she flieth over fish in pools, The fish shall turn their glistering bellies up. And' thou shalt take thy liberal choice of all." 142 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. And also in Drayton, Polyolhion, song xxv.,— " The osprey, oft here seen, tho' seldom here it breeds, ■ Which over them the fish no sooner do espy, ,^ But, betwixt him and them by an antipathy, Turning their bellies up, as though their death they saw, They at his pleasure lie, to stuff his gluttonous maw." 3. An old belief is mentioned by Harrison, in his "Description of Britain," prefixed to Holinshed's " Chroniclej" vol. i., p. 382, who writes' respecting the osprey, " It hath not beene my hap hitherto to see' ariie of these foules, and partlie through mine owne negligence ; but I heare that it hath one foot like a hawke to catch hold withall, and another tesemWing a goose, wherewith to swim ; but whether it be so or not so, I refer the further search and trial thereof to some other." Giraldus Cambrensis ("Topography of Ireland," p. 38, ed. Wright) improves on this, moralising as follows : — " In lite manner the old enemy of mankind fixes his keen eyes on us, however we may try to conceal ourselves in the troublesome waves- of this present world, and ingra- tiating himself with us by temporal prosperity, which may be compared to the peaceable foot, the cruel spoiler then puts forth his ravenous claws to clutch miserable souls and drag them to perdition." Order Steganopodes. Family PelecaniDjE. Genus Phalacrocorax. CORMORANT (PAafcj-ocoma; carlo). (Fi'. Gormoran — i.e. Corvus marinus, or Sea raven. Another derivation is from Cor =t Gorbeau and Moran, a contraction of the Breton word Mdrvran, which means Sea crow.) Also called Sea crow. Coal goose (Kent). Scart (Lancashire; North of Ireland; Orkney Isles). Cf. Scarf (Norway). See below, under Shag, 1. Gorma — i.e. Gor mew. See under Carrion Crow, 1. . In the Shetland Isles the young cormorants are called "brongie," the adults " loering." Cowe'en elders (Kirkcudbright). From Colvend, a coast parish in that county. Mochrum elders (Wigtown). From a loch of that name. "Perhaps their present appellation was bestowed on the cormorants by our Presbyterian forefathers in the days when the kirk session held supreme sway in rural places, and might be one way in which the people showed theu- dislike to its inquisitorial functions." (Robert Service, in Zoologist, 1878, p.- 428.) ^ Isle of Wight parsons (Hants). PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 143 2. Thompson, in his "History of the Birds of Ireland" (iii. 241), says that the country-people about Lough Neagh believe that these birds daUy visit the sea, and that they would die if they did not get a drink of salt water within the twenty-four hours. The voracity of the cormorant has become so proverbial, that a greedy and voracious eater is often compared to this bird. At certain states of the tide — chiefly about low water— cormorants may often be seen standing on the rocks, with outspread wings, drying their feathers : — " The cormorant stands upon its shoals, His black and dripping wings Half open to the vrind.' ' So, too, does Kilton say of Satan, that he " On the tree of life, . The middle tree, the highest there that grew. Sat like a cormorant," 3. On Sunday, September 9th, 1860, a cormorant took up its position on the steeple of Boston church, in Lincolnsl^ire, much to the alarm of the superstitious. There it remained, with the exception of two hours' absence, till early on Monday morning, when it was shot by the caretaker of the church. The fears of the credulous were singularly confirmed when the news arrived of the loss of the Lady Elgin at sea, with three hundred passengers, amongst whom were Mr. Ingram, member for Boston, with his son, on the very morning when the bird was first seen. SHAG (Phalotcrocorax graculus), 1. So called from the tufted rough feathers that appear on the heads of the male birds when young. (A.-S. scega, akin to Swedish skagg, a beard). Whence also Crested cormorant. Tufted skart. Skart (Orkney Isles). Scarf (Shetland Isleg). 2. Various names. Crane (Northumberland). Green cormorant (Ireland). From the rich dark-green colour of its plumage. Cole goose (Kent). 144 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Genus Sula. > GANNET {Sula hassana). 1. A.-S. gemot (akin to Dutch gent = a gander) ; whence Gan (Wales ; Forfar). Herring gant (Norfolk). 2. Also called Solan goose. " Solan is derived from Icelandic Sulan = the gannet, where n stands for the definite article " (Skeat). Bass goose, or BaSser (Forfar). From their favourite haunt, in the Firth of Forth, the Bass rook ; hence the Latin bassana. Mr. Rennie ("Hahits'of Birds," p. 377) states that the more uninformed of the Scottish peasantry believe- that this bird grows by the bill upon the cliffs of the Bass, of Ailsa and of St. Kilda. Channel goose (North Devon). Spectacled goose. Order Herodiones. Family Aedeid^. Genus Aedea. HERON (Ardea cinerea). 1. The heron, or hern, is so called from its harsh cry. Other forms of the same word are Ham (Norfolk). Harnser (Suffolk). Hamsey (Norfolk). Hernsew, Heronseugh (Yorkshire). Hemshaw, Heronshaw (Notts). Huron (Roxburgh). Herald (Forfar). Hegrie, Skip hegrie, HegrU's skip (Shetland Isles). Cf. HSgron (Savoie) ; Aghirone (Italy). 2. Familiar names. Jack hem (Sussex). Moll hern (Midlands). Jenny crow (North). . PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 145 Jenny heron (Kirkcudbright), Tammie herl (Perth). . Jemmy lang legs (Hundred of Lonsdale). Jemmy lang neck „ „ 3. Also called Frank (Suffolk ; Stirling). From its harsh cry. Crane (Somerset; !N'orthants; Westmoreland; Lancashire; Ireland ; Scotland). Longie crane (Pembroke)." Long-necked heron (Ireland). Craigie heron (Stirling ; North Scotland). " Craig " = throat. 4. Herons prognosticating rain. " Herons," -writes an old author, " flying up and down in the evening, as if doubtful where to rest, presage some evill approaching weather." The Germans say, " Wenn der Fisohreiher das Wasser au^fliigt, holt er Wasser." 5. Proverbial saying. "He does not know a hawk from a handsaw": referred to in SfanUet, Act II., Sc. ii. : — " I am but mad north-north-west ; when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw." Here " handsaw " is a corruption of " heron- . shaw," or "hemshaw" ; and the saying is one of contempt. Mr. J. C. Heath points out that as the morning used to be the favourite time for the sport of hawking, when the wind blew from the north-west the birds would probably fly so that any person watching them had the sun in his eyes, and could not easily distinguish the quarry from its pursuer ; but that when the vrind was southerly, the birds flew from the sun and one could easily "know a hawk from a handsaw." (See "Notes to Samlet," by Clark and Wright, 1876, p. 159.) 6. The heron in medicine. ' The fat of a heron, killed at the full of the moon, is believed in the north of Ireland to be an excellent remedy for rheumatism. 7. Folk lore of the heron. In Angus there is a popular superstition that this bird waxes and wanes with the moon ; that it is plump when the moon is full, and so lean at the change that it can scarcely raise itself, so that it can almost be taken with the hand. -(Jamieson.) It is said in Ireland that small eels pass through the intestines of a, heron uninjured, so that it swallows the same individual several times in succession. This belief was shared by Pontoppidan, who goes most minutely iito particulars to explain the process. The Bohemians declare that the heron warns men of their danger when lost in the marshes, and endeavours by her cry to lead them to a safe place. 8. Vow of the heron. When Robert of Artois, having been outlawed by Philip of Valois, and driven from Namur, took refuge at the coyirt of Edward III., he endeavoured ^ 10 146 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. to excite the ambition of that moaaroh by urging him to tear the French crown from the brows of Philip, and place it, as his rightful inheritance, on his own head. ' To effect this, he had recourse to the following device. One day he proceeded to the palace, accompanied by minstrels, and bearing in great state two silver dishes, each of which contained a roast heron. Kneeling before the monarch, he offered them for his acceptance, declaring that they, the most cowardly of all birds, were well suited as a present to the greatest coward that ever lived. The plan was successful ; and Edward, with all his knights, pledged themselves to enter France, sword in hand, before a year had expired. This incident forms the subject of a historical poem of the fourteenth century (published in 1781 by M* La Cume de ^t. Palaye) entitled " The Vow of the Heron, " which may. be found in Mr. Thomas Wright's " Political Poems and Songs, etc., temp. Edw. III. to Eio. III. " Qenus Botaurus. BITTERN (Botaurus 1. 0. E. Bitoure J wkence also Bittour. Buttel. Butter bump, or Bottle bump (Yorkshire). Bitter bum. Bumpy cors — i.e. Welsh, Bwmp y govs = Boom of the marsh. Bumble. 2. It frequents moist and boggy places ; which habit, combined with its hoarse cry, have caused it to be called Bog bumper (Scotland). Bog blutter, or Bog jumper. Bog drum (Ireland ; Scotland). Bull o'the bog (Koxburgh). 3. The deep and solemn character of the booming noise peculiar to the male bittern, has vested the bird with an uncanny character. " I remember," says Goldsmith in his " Animated Nature," " in the place where I was a boy, with what terror the bird's note affected the whole village : they considered it the presage of some sad event ; and generally found, or made, one to succeed it. I do not speak ludicrously, but if any person in the neighbourhood died, they supposed it could not be otherwise, for the Night Raven had foretold it." (For " Night raven " see under "Brown Owl.") The cry to which Goldsmith alludes was formerly supposed to be produced by the bird plunging its bili into the mud : hence Chaucer writes " And as a BUtore burnbleth in the irwre.'' (" Wife of Bath." But Dry den, in his corresponding line, follows another explanation — viz.j that the bittern puts its bill into a reed, and then' blows through it : ',' , " Then to the water's brink she laid her head, ,. ■ , '; And aa a Bittern Jnwi's within a reed." PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 147 Biehop Hall, in his " Characters of Verfcues and Vices,'' speaking of the superstitious man, says, " If a Bittowm fly over his head by night, he makes his will." 4. WeatEer prognostics from the bittern's cry. " ThereTl either be rain or else summut waur, When Butter Sumps sing upon Potteric Carr " .'(J. Hawley, in Zoologist, February 1869,) writing from the neighbourhood of Doncaster : a proverb used by old people' as the bird is now extinct. The Geimans say : " If the bittern is heard early, we may expect a good harvest." 5.. 'Folk lore of the bittern. " I knew a man of very high dignity," says Sir Humphrey Davy, " who was exceedingly moved by omens, and who never went out shooting' without a bittern's claw fastened to his button-hole by a riband, which' he thought insured him ' good luck.' " Order Anseres. Family Anatid.*. Getms Ansee. GREY-LAG GOOSE (Anser cinereus). 1. Yarrell states that the term "lag," as applied to this bird, is either a modification of the English word " lake " (Latin locus), or perhaps an abbreviation of the Italian lago, from which latter country it is even probable that we may originally have obtained this our domesticated race. Also called Wild goose. Fen, or Marsh, goofee. Stubble goose (East Lothian). Grey goose. ' 2. Wild geese as prognosticating the weather. . •These birds fly in the shape of A or V, or in an irregular wavy line, the strongest males being the leaders, and the youpg and weak forming the rear : hence the belief that the figure in the form of which they flew denoted the number of weeks of frost that would follow their appearance. In Morayghirfe they have a saying, " Wild geese, wild geese, ganging to the sea, Good weather it will be : Wild geese, wild geese, ganging to the hill, The weather it will spill. 148 PROVINCIAIi NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 3. In Scotland, says Chambers, when they see wild geese on the wing, the boys cry at the top of their voides — " Here's a string o' wild geese, How mony for a penny ? Ane to my lord. And ane to my lady, Up the gate and down the gate^ They're a' flown frae me." 4. It was beUeved that wild geese were peculiarly affected when flying By St. Hilda's Abbey, near Whitby. Camden writes, referring to this, " that those wilde geese which in winter time flie by flockes unto pooles and rivers that are not frozen over, in the south partes, whiles they flie over certaine fields neere adjoyning, aoudainely fall downe to the ground, to the exceeding great admira- tion of all men : a thing that I would not have related, had I not heard it from very many persons of right good credit. But such as are not given to superstitious credulity, attribute this unto a secret property of the ground, 'and to a hidden dissent betweene this soUe and those geese, such as is betweene wolves and squilla root " 5. The proverbial expression, "a wild goose chase,'' equivalent to an unsuc- cessful undertaking, is derived from the shyness and extreme wariness of the bird, which render approach extremely difBcult. BEAN GOOSE {Anser segetum). 1. Also called Corn goose ; names given from the bird's partiality to grain and pulse. Cf. Oie des moissons (France). Wild goose (East Lothian ; Ireland). 2. Mr. Yarrell (Noteg and Queries, Ser. I,, vol. v., p. 596) states that the noise in the air attributed to the Gabriel or Wish hounds, or Seven whistlers (see Widgeon, Lapwing, Curlew), is really caused by the bean geese coming southwards on the approach of ' winter, who choose dark nights for their migration, and utter loud and pecuUar cries. WHTTE-FEONTED GOOSE {Anser albifrons). 1. So called from the bird's white forehead; whence also White-faced goose. Bald goose (Scotland). 2 Various names. Laughing goose. Cf . Oie rieuse (France), , Tortoise-shell goose (Ireland). From the mottled markings on the abdomen. PROVINCIAL NAMKS OF BRITISH BIRDS. 149 Genus Behnicla. BRENT GOOSE {Bernicla hrenta). From Welsh hrenig, Breton hrenaiig, a limpet, 1. From the cry of this bird, which is varied, sounding like the different expressions " prott," " rott," and " crock," are derived the names Kott goose, or Rat goose. Road goose, or Bood goose. Clatter goose (East Lothian). Quink goose. Crocker. Cf. Crot (Picardy). " The Swedes call it the prut, as the peculiar noise it makes is supposed to resemble the voice of an old woman who is beating . down the price [prtU) of an article she wishes to buy." (" Naturalist in Norway," p. 178.) 2. Also called Ware goose (Durham). Because it feeds on seaweed, called "ware.'' JSorie, or Horra, goose (Shetland Isles), From being found in the Sound of Horra. Brant (Norfolk). See above. Black goose (Essex). Barnacle (Ireland). The common name for this species in. Ireland — a name entirely erroneous. But in some parts the true Barnacle goose and the Brent are distinguished as the Norway Barnacle and the Wexford Barnacle. .BAEITACLE GOOSE {Bernicla leucopsis). See below. 1. Also called Bar goose (Essex). Clakis or Claik (Bast Lothian, and Scotland generally). Perhaps from the claik or clack, the noise they make. White-faced barnacle. Norway barnacle (Ireland). Rood goose (obsolete). Routherbck (Orkney Isles : an almost obsolete term). 2. Tree goose. So called from the old legend which declared this bird to be produced from trees, resembling willows, which grew in the Orkney Isles ; it being also 150 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. believed that each end of the branch produced small round balls, which, when ripe, dropped into the sea, and then appeared as a.perfeot goose. A little later on, this story became .modified. Gerard, Meyer, Gesner, Turner, and others declared that the germ of the bernicle was to be found in a species of shell (Lepas anoMfera) which adheres in clusters to decayed timber arid the bottom of ships. The quaint account Gerard gives of it is worth transcribing. After saying that barnacles were produced, according to the testimony of others, in the north of Scotland and the adjacent islands called Orcades, he proceeds to declare "what his own eyes have seen and hands have touched. There is a small island in Lancashire called the Pile of Foulders, wherein are found the broken pieces of old ships, some whereof have been cast thither by shipwreck, and also the trunks or bodies, with the branches, of old rotten 'trees, cast up there likewise, whereon is found a certain spume or froth, that in time breedeth into certain shells, in shape like those of the mussel, but sharper pointed, and of a whitish colour ; wherein is contained a thing in form like a lace of silk, one end whereof is fastened unto the inside of the shell, even as the fish of oysters and mussels are. The other end is made fast unto the belly of a rude mass or lump, which in time Cometh 'to the shape and form of a bird ; when it is perfectly formed, 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 groweth greater it openeth the shell by degrees, till at length it is all come forth and hangeth only by the bill. In short space after it cometh to full maturity, and faSeth into the sea, where it gathereth feathers and groweth to a fowl, bigger than a mallard, and lesser than a goose ; having black legs and 'bill, or beak, and feathers black and white, spotted in such a manner as is our magpie, which the people of Lancashire call by no other name than a tree goose." That there might be no mistake pn the subject he adds, " For the truth hereof, if any doubt, may it please them to repaire unto me, and I shall satisfie them by the testimonie of good witnesses" (Herbal, p. 1587). Many old writers— e.g. Shakespeare {Tenypeit, iv. 1) ; Butler ("Hudibras," iii. 2. 655) ; Du Bartaa ("Divine Week," p. 228) ; Bishop Hall (" Virgidemiarum," lib. iv. sat. 2)— mention this strange idea. The marine animal— a triton, having many ciirhi or fine feather-like tentacula, with a long worm-like stem by whidi it hangs— • that gave rise to this error, is to be found adhering in clusters to floating pieces of wood and the sides of rocks. Its shell is milk-white, thin, smooth and semi-transparent, with the top open. 3. As regards the derivation of " bemacle," Max Mtiller (" Lectures on the Science of Language," 2nd series, 1864, pp. 533-51) thinks that "barnacles," the oirripeds, " pernaculse," were confused with the geese that came from Ireland, " hibemiculse." (List of British Birds.) Genus Cygnus. MTJTE SWAN {Cygnus olor). 1. So called from its comparative silence j though not ab- solutely voiceless, for it utters now and then a soft, low, plaintive note, especially while with its young. Col. Hawker (" Instructions to Young Spoftsmen," ed. xi., p. 269) writes that he was " amused with watching and listening to a domesticated swan, as he swam up and down the water in the Eegent's Park. He tuned up a sort PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 151 of melody, made with two notes, C and the minor third, E flat, and kept working his head as if delighted with his own performance." 2. Various names are given to the male and female of the domesticated swan. YarreU says that the former jp called Cob, the latter Pen. On the Thames the cock birds are called Tom, or Cock ;'the hens, Jenny, or Hen. In the " Arohseologia " (xvi. 16) it is stated that the old Jjincolnshire names were Sire and Dam, respectively. 3. Swans singing before death. This old superstition has been thoroughly disproved by modem research. How it originated it is impossible to say, but it is found, according to Douce ("Illustrations of Shakespeare," i. 262), in Plato, Ghrysippus, Aristotle, Eiiripedes, Philostratus, Cicero, Seneca, and Martial, though discredited by- Pliny, .^lian, Athenseus, and, more recently, by Sir Thomas Browne.' It is aUu^ed to several times by Shakespeare — e.g. in the Merchant of Venice, Act iii., sc. 2 : — " A swan-like end, fa.ding in music " ; and in OthMo, Act v., sc. 2 : — " I win play ^he swan, and die in music" 4. Weather lore. Swans are believed in Hampshire to be hatched in thunderstorms, the reason of which bit of folk lore is not known. There is no doubt that they have an instinctive prescience of floods, for it is a well-known fact that before heavy rains the birds whose home is on the banks of the Thames raise their nests so as to save their eggs from being chilled by the water. 5. The swan a royal bird. , In England the swan is a royal bird, and by. a statute (22 Edward IV.), it was ordered that no person who did not possess a freehold of ' a clear yearly value of five marks should be permitted to keep any swans ; and in 11 Hen. YII. it was ordained that "any one stealing or taking a swan's egg should have one year's imprisonment, and make payment of a fine at the king's wiU." Even at the present time it is felony to steal, or injure in any way, " a yoimg swan." The privilege of keeping " a game " of swans is manifested by the grant of a swan mark, which is cut in the skin, or on the beak, of the swan, with a sharp knife. , The Queen's mark is composed of five long ovals, pointed at each end. Two of these are placed in a longitudinal direction ; the other three transversely, a little lower down. The mark of the Vintners Company consists of two nicks in. the form of a V ; hence thes origin of the inn sign — the " Swan with Two Necks " (i.e. nicks). It used to be the custom of the Dyers and Vintners Companies, who own many swans on the Thames, to go up the river on the first Monday in August for the purpose of nicking, or marking, and counting their birds. This yearly " progress " was qommonly called "swan-hopping," the correct title being " swan-upping " ; the swans being taken up, nicked or marked. (For further information on swans' marks, see Yarrell ii). >v.b voc.) 6. Oath on the swan._ . The peacock, swan, heron, and pheasant were birds of high esteem in the days of chivalry. The swan was the device of Edward I. ; and in 1306, when the young Prince Edward, after receiving knighthood from his father, conferred that honour on three hundred young gentlemen, his friends, " after 152, PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. he had dubbed and embraced them all," two. swans were introduced, " gor- geously caparisoned, their beaks gilt, a most pleasing sight to all beholders," and upon them Edward vowed that he would avenge the death of John Comyn. It was also an old German custom (see Grimm's " Rechtsalter- thiimer," 900) to swear upon the swalh, probably because it was sacred to Freyr, whose cloud-ship, Skidbladnir, it would resemble. 7. The swan lamenting. "The swan," says Braithwaite ("The Penitent Pilgrim," 1641 — Reprint Pickering, 1853, p. 128), "if at any time she pride herseK in her beSuty, no sooner looks upon her black feet th^ she wails her plumes." WHOOPEE SWAN {Gygnus musicus). 1. So called from its powerful voice ; other names are Whistling swan. WUd swan." Elk. Cf . the Breton term, alaro'h. As these birds fly in wedge-like figure they utter a shrill, whooping cry, which produces a pleasant effect as it comes down from, the upper air, modulated by distance. So Drayton' writes of the Lincolnshire fens, — " Here in my vaster pools, as white as snow or milk, In water black as Styx, swims the wild swan, the ilke (i,e. elk) Of Hollanders so termed, no niggard of his breath, (As poets say of swans who only sing in death) ; But, as other birds, is heard his tunes to roat. Which like a trumpet comes, from his long' arched throat." (" Polyolbion," Song xxv.) 2. Swan maidens. In the old Aryan mythology the sky was regarded as a sea or great lake, and the clouds either as ships sailing over it or as bright birds, the fleecy cirrhi being looked upon as swans. From this thought it was easy to pass to the idea that these birds were maidens with swans' plumage, who could assume the human form at will. (See for a full treatment of this subject Baring Gould's "Myths of the Middle Ages," ii. 296 et aej., also Cox's "Aryan Mythology,'' , ii. 282, 283.) _ ^ It is believed in county Mayo, on the authority of Mr. E . Glennon, " that the souls of virgins who, whilst living, had been remarkable for the purity of their lives, were after death enshrined in the form of these birds, as emblematic of their purity and beatitude. For this reason they remain in safety, as it is also believed that whoever should be so unlucky as to meddle with them would pay for his temerity by the forfeit of his life ere the year had elapsed. " (Walters' " Nat. Hist, of the Bu'ds of Ireland," pp. 194, 195.) 3. Order of the Swan. Connected with the above myth of the Swan maidens are the romances of Lohengrin and Helios, the Knight of the Swan, in commemoration of which PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. ' 153 Frederic II. of Brandenburg instituted the Order of the Swan, in 1440. There was also an order of 'knighthood of the same name at Cleves, of which duchy one Tersion of the story made Helias duke. Through Anne of Cleves the White Swan became a favourite tavern sign, a. Romance of Lohengrin. Lohengrin was son of Percival, and Knight of the Holy Grail. Summoned mysteriously from Montsalvatsch he came to Brabant in a. boat drawn by a swan, and, having freed the Duchess Elsen from Frederic of Telramund, who claimed her as his wife, married her, on the condition that she should not ask his race. For some time they lived happily together ; but one day his wife, being laughed at by her friends for not knowing whence her husband had sprung, resolved to ask him of his family. He told her that his father was Percival, and that God had sent him from the custody of the Grail ; and then the white swan reappeared with the boat and carried >"'Tin away. h'. Romance of Helias. Helias, Knight of the Swan, was son of Oriant, King of Lilef ort, and Beatrice. This Beatrice had seven children at a birth, one of whom was a daughter. Matabrune, her mother-in-law, caused them, when young, to be ei^posed in a forest, where they were taken care of by a hermit. However, they were discovered by the old queen's servants, and robbed of the silver chains which each wore ; whereupon .they were all changed into swans except Helias, who, being absent with the hermit, escaped. The rest of his life was spent in recovering his brothers' chains and restoring them to their former shape, which he succeeded in doing, except in the case of one whose chain had been melted down, and who therefore was doomed to remain a swan all his life. These two were the heroes of wonderful adventures, till Helias married the heiress of Bouillon, becanje ancestor of Godfrey, and finally disappeared for ever from his wife's sight m a-boat drawn by a swan, his brother. Gmms Tadorna. COMMON SHELDSAEE {Tadm-na cornuta). 1. Called sheldrake from its variegated plumage, "shelled "or " sheld " having that meaning still in the Eastern counties. Shell duck (Lancashire). Skeldrake or Scale drake (Orkney Isles). Skeel goose ; Skeel duck (Scotland). Sheld fowl (Orkney Isles). 2. The bar or belt of bright red-brown which passes round the breast on to the back has obtained for it the names of Bar gander (Essex). Bar drake (Ireland). Bay duck (Norfolk). From the colour of the belt. 154 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 3. Various names. St. George's duck. Burrow duck. • Because it makes its nest either in a rabbit burrow or in a hole hollowed out by itself. Cf. XtiPaWwr;^ (Greece) ; Canard Menard or Camard lapin (France) ; Volpoca (Tuscany). Pirennet, i,e. Pied ent or Pied duck. Stock annet (East Scotland). i.e. Stock ent. (See Jamieson, under " Stock Duck.") Sly goose (Orkney Isles). So called from its craftiness. Links goose (Orkney Isles). Because it frequents the links, or sandy plains near the sea. Genus Mareca. WIGEOlf (Mareca penelope). From vipio (Lat.) =a small crane, as pigeon ivora. pipio. 1. From its loud whistling call-notes this bird has .received the names Whistler. Cf . Canard siffieur (France) ; Pfeifer (Bavaria). Whim. Whewer, or Whew duck. (See below, 3.) Cf. Vioux (Savoy). " Pandle '" whew (Norfolk). " Pandle," in Kent, means a shrimp. 2. Various names. Bald pate. Half duck (Norfolk). Because worth only half the value of a wild duck. Smee duck (Norfolk).. Cock winder (ditto). 3. The difference in the colours of the male and female has caused the following names to be applied to each : — Golden head, or Yellow poll. The male is so called on the east coast of Ireland ; while the PROVINCIAl NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 155 females are called in the same district ^' Black wigeons," and in Norfolk, according to Ray, " Whewers." Latham says that the young males were sold in London under the name of " Easterlings," and the females under that of " Lady fowl." 4.. In Shropshire every species of wild duck, with the exception of Anas bosaas, is called wigeon. 5. The loud ringing sound of the wigeons' wings, combined with their long, clfear call-notes, heard during the night while the birds pass over in their flight, has caused the name of the " Seven whistle;;s " to be given to them in Portugal ; where they are supposed to be the spirits of unbaptised children. (See under Lapwing, Curlew.) 6. The wigeon was supposed to be a sUly bird, hence the word was sometimes used as synonymous with a fool. So " Th' apostles of this fierce religion, Like Mahomet's, were ass and wigeon," (« Hudibras," I. i. 231,) i.e., silly beast and silly bird. Genus Dapila. PINTAIL {Bafila acuta). 1 . So called from the pointed appearance of the bird's tail, the two middle feathers of which are longer than the rest. Cf . Pointard (Anjou), Pfeilschwcmz (Swabia), Schwalbenente (Switzerland), Guda longa (Sicily). From this, as also from the beauty of its plumage, it has the name of Sea pheasant (Hants ; Dorset). Cf. Faisan de mer (France). 2. Also called Cracker. "Winter duck. Lady bird (Dublin Bay). From its grace of form. Harlan (Wexford). 156 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Genus Anas. WILD DUCK {Anas boscas). 1. The male is called Mallard, i.e. male duck. Of. Mala/rt (France), Malla/rdo (Naples). The female Duck. The young ones Flappers. From the maimer in which they ecuffle along the water with feet and wings. 2. Various names. Stock duck (Orkney Isles). Cf . Stock Ente (Germany). Mire duck (Forfar). Moss duck (Renfrew ; Aberdeen). Muir duck (Stirling). Grey duck (Lancashire ; Dumfries). 3. Weather prognostic, derived from habits of wild ducks ^ " When ducks are driving through the bum That night the weather takes a turn-" 4. As the wild duck is undoubtedly the original of our domestic varieties, it will be well to take this opportunity of noticing any scraps of folk-lore connected with the latter. (a) It is believed in Rutlandshire that ducks' eggs, brought into a house after sunset, will never be hatched. (6) The All Souls' Mallard. The story of this bird is, or perhaps used to be, well known to Oxonians. A full account of 'the occurrence which gave rise to the annual festival, held at All Souls' College on January 14th, may be found in Hone's "Year Book," pp. 44, 45, 46, and summarised in the following extract 'from Pointer's " Oxomensis Academia": — -"Another custom is that of celebrating their Mallard-night every year on the 14th of January, in remembrance of a huge mallard or drake found (as tradition goes) imprisoned in a gutter or drain under ground,, and grown to a vast bigness, at the digging for the foundation of the CoUege." " The Merry Old Song of the All Souls' Mallard,. " Griffin, bustard, turkey, capon, Let other hungry mortals gape on ; And on their bones their stomach fall hard. But let All Souls' men have their Mallard. Oh ! by the blood of King Edward, Qh ! by the blood of King Edward, It was a swapping, swapping MaUard. PBOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 157 " The Romans once admired a gwnder More than they did their chief commander ; Because he saved, if some don't fool us, The place that's called the head of Tolus, Oh ! by the blood, etc. " The poets feign Jove turned a swan, * But let them prove it if they can : As for our proof 'tis not at all hard, For it was a swapping, swapping Mallard. Oh ! by the blood, etc. " Therefore let us sing and dance a galliard, To the remembrance of the Mallard : And as the Mallard dives in pool. Let us dabble, dive, and duck in bowl. Oh ! by the blood, etc." (c) " Ducks and Drakes." This game is so called from the rebound of the stone on the water (French ricochet) resembUng the half flying, half running motion of the duck when shooting along the surface. Hence " to make ducks and drakes of one's money " is to spend or squander it in as foolish a manner as if it were a stone to make ducks and drakes with. - To " swim like at duck " is proverbial. (d) Divination from the breastbones of ducks. " In Richmondshire some perspps say that the breastbones of ducks after being cooked are observed to be dark coloured before a severe winter, and much lighter coloured before a mild winter." {Notes amd Queries, July 31st, 1878.) Gemos Chaulblasmus. GASWALL (Ghaidelaamus strepenes). Grey duck. Cf. Griset (Eastern Pyrenees). Kodge. Sand wigeon (Essex-). Gemi8 QUERQUEDULA. GARGANET {Querqueduld circia). ? = Small duck ; Gameta — i.e. petit canard (Provence) ; Gannette (Perry) ; Raoanette (Aube) ; Arccmette (Pajte Messin) ; so Grarganey. 158 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS, Pied wiggon or wigeon. Summer teal (Somerset ; Norfolk). From the time of its appearance. Summer duck. Cricket teal. From its cry . Cf . Cric eric (Jura) / Criquet (Savoy) ; Kriechentlein (Ger- any). COMMON TEAL [Querquedula crecoa). Dutch Teling. Jay teal (Kirkcudbright). From its colour. Tael dmk — i.e. Teal duck (Scotland generally). Genus Spatula. SHOVELLER {Spatula olypeata). ■ 1. So called from its brpad, curiously formed bill; \(rhence also Shovel bill. Broad bill. •Shovelard (Norfolk, Sir Thos. Browne). ' . Spoon bill, or Spoon beak (Norfolk). Whinyard (Waterf ord). ' Whiuyard is the name for a knife like the shoveller's bill in shape. Cf . Bee en cvMer (France) ; Paletione (Italy) ; Loffelente (Ger- many). 2. VariSus names. Maiden duck (Wexford). Sheldrake (Waterf ord). From the rich varied plumage of the male hird. . Kirk tuUock. ' Blue- winged shoveller. Oemis FunauLA. TUFTED DUCK {FuUgula cristataX 1. So called from the pendent crest of very narrow feathers on the back of the head. PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 159 2. The following names, given to this bird, nearly all, have reference to its colour, viz. : — White-sided duck, or diver (Armagh). . Black wigeori (Devon). Of. Nigrovm (Provence) ; MoriUon (France generally). Black poker (Norfolk). Poker is a common name in East Anglia for many species of the duck tribe. Black curre (Hants). Gold-eye duck ("Wexford). Crested diver (Ireland). •Curre wigeon (Somerset). Doucker — 4.6. Diver (Islay). SCAUP {FuUgvIa marUa). 1. So named from its feeding among broken oyster and mussel shells ; called in the north " scaup," whence also Mussel duck (Norfolk). 2. From its colour. a. The male is called Green-headed diver (Belfast). Black-headed diver. From the black feathers, glossed with green, of the head. Black duck (Somerset). From the black head, neck, breast and winga. Cf. n4gri (Qard). 6. The female. Bridle duck (Dublin). "White-faced duck. From the broad white band round the base of the bill. Dun bird (Essex). From the dusky brown of its head, neck, breast and rump. 3. Various names. Spoonbill duck (East Lothian). From its broad bill. Norway duck (Belfast). Norwegian teal (Banff). Mule (Wexford). Holland- duck (Forfar). 160 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. FOCHABD {PuUgiila/erina). Also called Poker (Lincolnshire; Hants). 1. From its colour this bird has the naines of Dun bird (Essex ; Dumfries ; Ireland). Dun curre ; Dun. air. Blue poker. Snuff-headed wigeon. Red-headed, or Eed-eyed, poker. Cf. Bouy testo rousso (Gard). Red-headed cuixe, or Red-headed -wigeon. Gold head (North of Ireland). 2. Also called Wigeon diver (Cork Harbour). Fresh-water wigeon (North of Ireland). BuU-headed wigeon (Ditto). Great-headed wigeon. Vare-headed {i.e. weasel-headed) wigeon. See under Smew. ■ Whinyard (Wexford). See under Shoveller. Diver or Doucker (Roxburgh). Smee duck (Norfolk). A name also given to the -wigeon. Well plum. Atteal, or Attile duck (Orkney Isles). Perhaps from loel. HaMdr, Oenus Clangula. GOLDEN-EYE (Clangula glcmdon). 1. So called from the bright yellow irides ; whence Golden -eyed garrot. Gowdy duck (East Lothian ; Orkney Isles). Lloyd says of it, " From the brilliancy of the eye there is a sa,ying in Sweden, 'Klart som ett knip-oga ' — i.e. bright as the eye of the golden-eyed garrot." Cf. garrot (France). 2. The dark back and white under parts have caused it to be named Pied wigeon. Whiteside (Westmoreland). Grey-headed duck. Only applied to the female bird. PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISfi BIRDS. 161 3. The following names are derived f^om the whistling made with the wings. Eattlewings (Norfolk). Whistler. Cf. Schelle Ente (Germany) — i.e. Bell dvick. From the sound produced by the flight resembliiig the tmklmg of aleigh bells. 4. From its diving propensities it is called Diving duck (Shetland Isles). Diver or Doucker (Roxburgh). Popping wigeon (Drogheda Bay). As it pops down and up so suddenly. 5. Various names. MorUlon. From the black head, neck and back of the males, which are so called, and described by some authors as a distinct species. In France, the name morillon is given to the tufted duck {FuUgvla .cmtoto). Eresh-water wigeon (Strangford Lough). Brown-headed duck. Curre. f From the bird's croaking cry. Genus Habelsa. lONG-TAHED DUCK {Harelda glacialis). 1, Also called Sharp-tailed duck. Swallow-tailed sheldrake. '2. From its long plaintive cry it has received the names of Caloo, or Calaw (Orkney, Shetland Isles). DarcaU. Coal and candle-light (Orkney Isles). Col-candle-wick (Fife). Ooldie (Forfar). In the Hebrides it is called Jan-hliochail. Jan — bird ; Ihoohail expressing its soft protracted note. (McGillivrayj^) 11 162 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 3. Various names. Mealy bird (Norfolk). The young are so called. Northern Hareld (Aberdeen). Hareld — i.q. hdvelcQ the Icelandic name of the bird. Genus Somateria. EIDER DUCK {Somateria mollissima). '. From loel. cedr, an eider duck. 1 . Also called Great black-and-white duck. Dusky duck. Dunter, or Dunter goose (Shetland Isles). "Perhaps from old Swedish dun=Aomn, and taer-a— to gnaw, whence onr 'tear,' because it plucks the down from its breast as often as it lays its eggs " (Jamiesou). St. Cuthbert's duck, or Cudberduce (Northumberland). From these birds breeding on the Fam islands, on the coast of Northumber- land, where they were the companions of the. saint's solitude. 2. The following information respecting the eider duck is given by Bishop Pontoppidan, in his " Natural History of Norway. " — " If the first five eggs are taken away the bird lays agaiii, but only three eggs, and in another nest : and if these are stolen, she lays a single egg. The female sits on the eggs for four weeks, and the male bird watches by her side. If any human being or beast of prey approaches the nest, the male bird cries ' Hu, hu, hu,' and then the female covers her eggs with moss and down, which she has ready for the purpose, and joins her mate on the water. If she remains away too long, the male bird drives her back with his wings, and if the eggs are spoilt, he gives her a beating and deserts her." Genus CEdemia. COMMON SCOTER {^demia nigra). 1. From its colour this bird has received the names Black duck (Essex ; Norfolk ; Ireland). Cf. Cama/rd negre (Nice). Black diver (Ireland, east coast). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 163 2. Also called Surf duck (Scotland). From its habit of diving for ahell-fish among the breakers. Sea duck (Norfolk). Doucker (Lancashire ; Westmoreland). . 3. The fleah of this bird is so rank and fishy, from its feeding on shell-fish, that it is allowed to Roman Catholics on fast days and in Lent. This has origiiiated a belief which prevails in Normandy that, like the bemicle, it is produced from a bivalve, which is found adhering to the keela of ships. For the same reason is the proverb applied to a man on whom no reliance can be placed — " II resaemble k une macrguse (a scoter) ; il n'est ni ehair ni poiaaon." VELVET SCOTER {(Edemia fusca). Also called Velvet duck. Black diver. Great black duck. Double scoter. Cf. Grande macreuse, Double macreuse (France). Genus Mergus. GOOSANDER {Mergus merganser). 1. From its saw-Uke bill this bird is called SawbiU (Stirling). Cf. £ea en scie (France).. Sawneb (Aberdeen). Jacksaw. 2. The male bird presents a beautiful appearance, from the contrast of the rich buff orange colour of the breast Math the black back : hence the names Shell duck, (on the Shannon). Pied wigeon (Salop). The females and young males, on the contrary, are of a dull greyish brown : hence they are called Dun divers 164 PBOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BHIDS, 3. Various names. Land cormorant (Dublin). Rantock (Orkney Isles). Sparling fowl. Generally applied to the female bird. Spear wigeon (Kerry). RED-BREASTED MERGANSER {Mergus serrator)-^.e. Diving Goose. 1. From its long curved bill, furnished with a serrated or saw-like edge, this bird has received the names of Lesser-toothed diver. Sawbill (Aberdeen ; Stirling ; Gal way). Sawneb (Aberdeen). Sawbill wigeon (Galway). 2. From the Icel. ha/oeld (see p. 162), are derived Herald (Shetland Isles). Herald duck (Forfar; Shetland Isles). Harle (Orkney Isles). Cf. HaHe (France) ; Erlou (Piedmont). Harle duck (Orkney Isles). Earl duck (East Lothian). Land harlan (Wexford). 3. Various names. Bardrake (Down). From the brown and ash-coloured streak on the rump. Scale duck (Strangford Lough). Grey diver (Islay). Applied to the female bird. Popping wigeon (Drogheda Bay). A name also applied to the Golden eye (Clangida glaucion). SMEW {Mergus alhellw). 1. Also called Smee, or Smee duck (Norfolk). 2. From its white crest and the band of black feathers on the PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIEDS. 165 back of the head, which give something of the appearance of a hood, come the names White nun (Ireland). , Of. Nonnette (Picardy). White-headed goosander. White merganser, or White wigeon (Devon). From its black back and white under parts it is called Magpie diver (Ireland ; Kent). Cf. Piotte — H(ude piette (France). The female is called Red-headed smew. 3. In North Devon, according to Montagu, the name of Vare wigeon is given to the females and young males, from the EBaemblance of their heads to that of a " vare," or weasel. So in Norfolk they are called Weasel ducks, or Weasel coots. Lough diver. A name given to the immature males. Easterling. Order Colombo. Family Oolumbid.«!. Genus Columba. RINGDOVE {Golumha palitmhus). 1. From its cooing note this bird has received the names Too-zoo (Grloucestershire). Cooscot (Craven; Teesdale). Cushat (Berks ; Bucks ; Craven ; Westmoreland). Cruchet (North). Cushiedoo. Cusha (Roxburgh). From ^-S. Gusceote. Dow or Doo (Norfolk). 2. As this note is one of melancholy, the bird is called Queest, Quest, or Quist (West- and West Midland). Quice, or Quease (Salop ; Gloucestershire). Wood quest (Dorset ; Ireland). From Lat. questus, a complaining. 166 PEOTINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 3. Various names. ; Culver (Dorset). Cf. A.-S. Culfre, — Couvre (Normandy). Cowprise (North). Woodpigeon. 4. The ringdove's note. The cooing of the woodpigeon produces, it is said— "Taketwo-o coo, Taffy! Take two-o coo, Tafify !" Alluding, says Mr. Chambers, to the story of a Welshman, who thus interpreted the note, and acted upon the recommendation by stealing two of his neighbour's cows. " In the North Riding of Yorkshire the common people believe that at one period the cushat or ringdove laid its eggs upon the ground, and that the peewit ^ contra made its nest on high. They further believe that an amicable exchange took place between the two birds, and that at the present day they respectively sing out their feelings upon the subject. A local rhyme will have it that the peewit sings^ ' Peewit, peewit, I coup'd my nest and I've it.' The cushat's note implies — ' Coo, coo, come now Little lad with thy gad, Come not now.' " (Brockett, " Glossary of North-Country Words," ii. 71.) Miss Busk, in her " Folk Lore of Rome," p. 20, gives a story of the wood- pigeon and magpie from a Berkshire source, two other versions of which are related by Mr. Halli well. MisS Busk's runs as follows : — "The magpie was one day building her nest so neatly, and whispering to heraelf after her wont as she laid each straw in its place, ' 'This upon that, this upon that, when the woodpigeon came by. Now, the woodpigeon was young and flighty, and had never learnt how to build a nest ; but when she saw how beautifully neat that of the magpie looked, she thought she would like to leam the art. The busy magpie willingly accepted the office of teaching her, and began a new one on purpose. Long before she was half through, however, the flighty, woodpigeon sang out, "That'll doo-oo." The magpie was offended at tihe interruption, and flew away in dudgeon, and that's why the woodpigeon always builds such ramshackle nests." Mr. Halliwell, quoting am Isle of Wight legend, tells us that " soon after the creation of the world, all the birds were assembled for the purpose of learning to build their nests, and the magpie, being very sagacious and cunning, was ' chosen to teach them. Those birds that were most industrious, such las the v?ren and the long-tailed capon or pie-finch, he instructed to make whole nests in the shape of a cocoanut, with a small hole on one side. Others, not so diligent, he taught to make half nests, shaped something like a teacup. Having thus instructed a greaf variety of birds according to their capacity, it came to the turn of the woodpigeon, who, being a careless and lazy bird, was very indifferent about the matter, amd while the magpie was directing him how to place the little twigs, etc., he kept eiclaimihg, ' Wlat, athurt and across I what zoo I what zoo I athurt and across 1 wihat zoo 1 what zoo I' At length the magpie was so irritated at his stupidity and indolence that he flew away, and the woodpigeon, having had no more iaastruction, to this day buUds the worst PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS, 167 nest of any of the feathered tribe, consisting merely of layers of cross twigs. Montagu," he continues, "gives a Suffolk version of the tale, which differs considerably from the above. ' The magpie, it is said, once undertook to teach the pigeon how to buUd a, more substantial and commodious dwelling ; but , instead of being a docile pupU, the pigeon kept on her old cry of " Take two, Tafiy ! take two !" The magpie insisted that this was a very unworkmanlike manner of proceeding, one stick at a time being as much as could be managed to advantage ; but the pigeon reiterated her " Take two, take two," till Mag in a violent passion gave up the task, exclaiming, " I say that one at a time's enough, and, if you think otherwise, you may set about the work yourself, for I will have no more to do with it." Since that time the woodpigeon has built her slight platform of sticks, which certainly suffers much in comparison with the strong substantial structure of the magpie.' " (HaUiwell's " Popular Ehymes," 260, 261.) Another imitation of the woodpigeoh's note is the following : " Curr dhoo ! curr dhoo ! Love me and I'll love you." While the pigeon and the wren hold this dialogue : "•The dove says, coo, coo, what shall I do ? I can scarce maintain two." (Alluding to the number of eggs always found in a ringdove's nest.) " Pooh ! pooh 1" says the wren, " I have got' ten, And keep them all like gentlemen." " ' Who stole my grey pease ?" says the quease." In Sweden it is said that a ringdove perched on the cross while the blessed Saviour was hanging thereon and sat there, wailing forth its sorrowing note of "Kyrie! Kyrie !" (Lord, Lord) to soothe His aggny. See under Lapwing, p. 185. 5. Proverbial sayings. " Pigeons never do know woe Till they do a benting go '." Wjth reference to which Mr. Halliwell says that these birds are never short of food, except when they are obliged to live on the seeds of the grass, which ripen before the crops of grain. The seedstalk of grass is called the " bent," hence the term "banting.'-' " When the pigeons go a benting. Then the farmers fie lamenting " (Norfolk). " Thee bist a queer quist." (Wilts.) The vulgar explanation of this phrase is, that a half-witted fellow got up a tree to rob what he supposed was a wood-quist's nest, when he discovered it was the nest of an owl, full of young ones, who, when the fellow attempted to take one of them, manifested their indignation at the intrusion by hissing and pecking, upon which he exclaimed, "Thee bist a queer quist 1" (Akerman's " Wiltshire Glossary," 41, 42.) STOCK DOVE (Columba cenas). So called from its nesting in the stocks of trees. Various names. Cushat (Northants). Wood dove (Scotland). Bush dove. 168 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIEDS. ROCK DOVE (Columha livia). 1. Also called Rocker or Rockier. Blue dove (North Riding). Sea pigeon. (Ireland). Rock pigeon (Ireland ; Scotland). Rock doo (Shetland Isles). Sod (Forfar). Doo (North Scotland). Wild pigeon (Shetland Isles). 2. As there is no doubt that this species is the original of our domestic pigeon, it will be well to take this opportunity of mention- ing any folk lore connected with that bird. , It ia essentially a bird of death. Thus, if =■ white pigeon settles on a chimney, some one of the occupants of the house will pass away ere long , but should the bird enter and perch on the table, it is considered a less portenboiis».}j omen, and to signify sickness. This is a wide-spread belief through England, ' as Mr. Henderson, in his " Folk Lore of the Northern Counties," p. 49, mentions two instances which have come under his own knowledge. " The recent death," he says, " of a clergyman of some eminence in the town of Hull was preceded by the flight of a pure white pigeon aroimd the house, and its resting again and again on tte window-sill." And the vicar of Fishlake, in the West Riding, informs nie that one of his parishioners mentioned the same portent to him ; telling him, as an illustration, of a Primitive Methodist preacher, a very worthy man, who had fallen down dead in the pulpit soon after giving out his text. " And not many hours before," she went on, " I had seen a white pigeon light on a tree hard by, and I said to a neighbour I was sure summat were going to happen." So,' too, all readers of "Westward Ho ! " will remember how a white bird was the presage of death to Captain Oxenham. It is also a common idea that no one can die (some say die happy) on pigeons' feathers. As an illustration of this, a correspondent of Notes and Queries, Ser. IV., viii. 470, informs us that when a pigeon pie was being made, his housekeeper invariably burnt the feathers. On being asked the reason, she replied that if a single feather were found in a bed or pfllow, nobody could die upon it, but would "die hard "till it was removed. The feathers of game birds are also considered in Gloucestershire to have the same property, as also in Yorkshii-e, Cumberland, Derbyshire, Monm6uthshire, Glamorganshire, and in Ireland. In a letter to the Athenceum, the explanation given is, that none of these feathers are fit for use, being too hard apd sharp in the barrel. Again, it ii believed in Northamptonshire that it is a sign of death should a sick person desire to eat a pigeon, as he would want nothing else. But on the other hand we hear from Gloucestershire that " the friends of a man on his deathbed sent, some distance, to one of his children ; and, lest the sick might die before his arrival, they put a live pigeon into the bedroom, and . kept it there, with the idea that its presence would prolong his life till his son's arrival." For an elaborate dissertation on the dove as a funeral bird and messenger of death, see Prof. Gubemafis' " Zoological Mythology," ii. 296 — 306. In Russia, according to Mr. Ralston (" Folk Tales," p. 181), pigeons are con- sidered sacred to the Third Person of the Trinity, instead of Perun (the old thunder god) ; and so to this day they look upon the slaying of a pigeon aa a great sin, one which will bring a murrain upon the herds of its perpetrator. Pigeons are supposed to bring good lv\ck with them, and to insure the house PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIEDSj 169 they haimt against fire. If a building does catch fire, a white pigeon will ex- tinguish the flames if it is thrown among them ; on the other hand, the flying of a pigeon into the house through the window forebodes a conflagration. It is believed in Venice that the pigeons which are fed daily iu the Piazza ' di San Marco are connected with the prosperity of the city ; that they fly round it three times every day in honour of the Trinity ; and that the fact of their building and roosting on St. Mark's is a sign that the town will not be swallowed up by the sea. ' Tljere is an old saying " that he who is sprinkled with pigeon's blood will never die a natural death " ; referring to whicb. Dr. Brewer says, " A sculptor, carrying home a bust o£ Charles I., stopped to rest on the way ; at the moment, a pigeon overhead was struck by a hawk, and the blood of the bird fell on the neck of the bust. The sculptor thought it ominous, and after the king was beheaded the saying became current." Pigeons were applied by our ancestors "to draw the vapours from the head." See Dr. Downe's " Devotions upon Emergent Occasions " (Works, vol. iii., p. 550, Lond. 1839) ; and Mr. Secretary Pepys informs us that Queen Catherine, being dangerously ill, had pigeons put to her feet (Oct. 19th, 1663), as also had Mr. Joyce (Jan. 21st, 1667-8). Bishop Jeremy Taylor (Heber's edition, xii. 290) recommends the same treatment : " We cut living (!) pigeons in halves and apply them to the feet of men in fevers." This seems a homoeopathic remedy, as the flesh of the bird was not accounted by the old mediciners good, when taken internally, for " those that be choleric or inclined to any fevers ; but to them which be phlegmatic and pure melancholy, they are very wholesome, and be easily digested " (Swan's " Speculum Mundi," 1643, p. 402). A French writer, quoted by M. EoUand (vi. 138), says " Un jeune pigeon plac^ sur la t6te d'un mourant attire i lui et boit tout le mal, comme une victime expiatoire " (Lucas de Montigny, " R&its varife," p. 51). See Bogaerts, " Histoire civile et religieuse de la colombe " : Anvers, 1847. From the time of the Fathers it was a common belief that pigeons had no gall. " Which if man could frame himself to be, the serpent's vrisdome woUld not hurt him, nor lean-faced envie sojourn with him." (Speculum Mundi, p. 401.) 3. Proverbial sayings. a. " A pigeon's pair," or Scottiofe " A doo's cleckin " (i.e. brood) ; spoken of a family of only two children, a boy and a girl, as the pigeon cinly lays two eggs. Hence the Queen says of Hamlet that, after his fit, he will be " as patient as the female dove When that her golden couplets are disclosed " {i.e. hatched). 6. " Who would hold his house very clean. Ought lodge no priest nor pigeon therein." Oenus TuETUK. TURTLEDOVE {Turtur comtmmis). 1. This bird receives its name from its moaning song, re- sembling the words " turr-turr " ; to which Virgil refers iu the line— " Nee gemere aeria cessabit turtur ab ulmo." It is also called in Shropshire, Wrekin dove. 170 PKOTINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 2. The dove as an emblem — a.. Of devoted affection. From the old but erroneous idea that doves paired for life and were models, of conjugal fidelity, we find frequent mention made of 'it, as a symbol of the above, in the poets. Hence, in Troihis and Cressida, Act iii., sc. 2, Troilus sayp — " As true as steel, as plantage to the moon, As sun to-day, as turtle to her mate. " And Sir Philip Sidney writes — " Time doth work what no man knoweth, Time doth us the subject prove ; With time still affection groweth To the faithful turtledove." It was believed also that the widowed dove would never drink again from any clear fount or spring, lest its own likeness, appearing on the surface of the water, should awake recollections of the mate it had lost. i. Of innocence and purity. Adopted by our Lord in the text "Be ye wise as serpents and harmless as doves." From this, as well as from the fact of the Holy Spirit appearing in its form, it was considered the Scriptural sign of the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity. On this account, also, saints were sometimes represented vrith this bird whispering in their ear words of Divine wisdom. So, in a painted window in the chapel of Lincoln College, Oxford, Elisha appears with a double-headed dove on his shoulder, referring to his petition to Ehjah that a " double portion of his spirit might rest upon him." Mahomet, says Sir Walter Raleigh (" History of the World," Book I., part i., c. 6) "adopted this idea. He had a dove he used to feed with seed out of his ear, which dove, when it was hungry, lighted on his shoulder and thrust its bill in for its accustomed meal, communicating, as his followers believed, past, present and coming events to the falfee prophet, and being the Holy Grhost under that form." In the " Legend of the Sanogr^al " we read that every Good Friday a dove descended from Heaven, bearing an offering which it laid before the holy vessel. , . 3. From its use as the symbol of the Holy Spirit, the dove is highly reverenced in CathoHc countries. In Italy and Germany it is considered a sm to eat the bird, as also is the case in Russia ; in Bohemia, no one kills it, as it is the special favourite of God, and considered to be a sure preservative from lightning. • In Swabia doves are much kept, so Bechstein informs us, from a belief that they are more predisposed than mankind to rheumatism, and that when this complaint visits a house, it attacks the birds rather than their owners. In the Channel Islands the possession of pet doves is regarded to be, in the case of an engaged person, a preventive to the course of true love .running smooth. A dove legend, Mr. Jones declares, is attached to Breedon church in Leicester- shire, which stands alone on the top of a high hill, with the village at its foot. They began building it within the village ; but the site was changed, because, it was said, every night the stones laid during the day were carried up to the hill-top by doves. There is a tradition in Haute Bretagne that the turtledove built Noah's ark. It is also believed to return to that province on Midsummer-day; and the PEOVINOIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 171 country-people tell the following story about it and the cuckoo. They say " that once upon a time, just at that season, the turtledove engaged the ouckoo to get in his hay. Unfortunately, whilst passing through a gate the latter stuck fast with his load, whereupon the dove began to abuse him, crying, ' Troue-troue-one ! ' The cuckoo, stuag by these upbraidings, made such tremendous efforts that he broke his wing I Ever since this disaster he sings with bis pinions outspread, while pther birds have them closed, and as soon as he hears the turtledove, takes to flight as quickly as possible." (SebiUot, " Haute Bretague," ii. 211.) . •• Order Galling. Family Phasianid.e. Gmms Phasianus. PHEASANT (Phasianus colcMcus). 1. The earliest mention of the occurrence of this bird in England, is, according to Mr. Harting (" Ornithology of Shakespeare," p. 211), to be found in a tract " De Inventione Sanctffi Crucis Nostras in Monte Acuto, et de ductione ejus- dem apud Waltham," edited from MSS. in the British Museum, and published in 1861. In one of these MSS., dated about 1177, the name of the pheasant occurs in a biU of fare prescribed by Harold for the canons' households, in 1059 : — " Erant autem tales pitantise unicuique canonico ; a festo Sancti Michaelis usque ad caput jejunii, aut xii. merulse, aut ii. agausese, aut ii^ perdices, OMt unus phasianus, reliquis temporibus aut aucse, aut gallinEe." When the pheasant was first preserved in England we cannot ascertain, but in the reign of Henry VIII. a proclamation was issued (1536) to "prevent the slaughter of partridges, pheasants, and herons from the palace of Westminster to St. Giles in the Fields, and from thence to Islington, Hampstead, Highgate and Homsey Park " ; and the same monarch reared pheasants at his palace at Eltham in large quantities, as appears from his " Privy Purse Expenses." 2. Oath on the pheasant. This was of a similar character to the vows on the heron and swan (which see), only attended with more pomp and ceremony. Thus, in 1453, we find that Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, vowed, at a great feast at LUle, that he would go to the deliverance of Constantinople, which had recently fallen into the hands of the Tuiks. " In the midst of the banquet," says Gibbon (" Decline and Fall, " ed. Smith, vol.' viii., p. 183), " a gigantic Saracen entered the hall, leading a fictitious elephant with a castle on his back ; a matron in a mourning robe, the symbol of Religion, was seen to issue from the castle ; she deplored her oppression, and accused the slowness of her champions. The principal herald of the Golden Fleece advanced, bearing on his fist a live pheasant, whieh^ according to the rites of chivalry, he presented to the Duke. At this extraordinary summons, PhUip, a wise and aged prince, engaged his person and powers in the holy war against the Turks ; his example was imitated by the barons and knights of the assembly : they swore to God, the Virgin, the ladies, and the Pheasant ; and their particular vows were not , less extra- vagant than the general sanction of tljeir oath. " However, in spite of these tremendous engagements, none of them ever stirred towards the performance of the vow ! As regards the origin of this oath on the pheasant (and peacock), M. La 172 PKOVINCIAl NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. Curne de Sainte Palaye writes, in his " Memoires sur rancienne Che¥aleri,e," torn, i., Z" partie, pp. 184 et seqq. : — " Les nobles oiseaux (oar on les qualifioit ainsi) rlpresentoient parfaitement, par I'^clat et la varidt^ de leurs couleurs, la majesty des rois et les superbes habillements dont ces monarques dtoient pards pour tenir ce que Ton nommoit Find, ou cour plenifere. La chair du Paon ou du Faiean dtoit, si I'on oroit les vieux Eomanciera, la nourriture partioulifere des preux et les amoureux. Leur plumage avoit 6t6 regard^ par les Dames des circles de Provence comme le plus riche ornement dont elles puisant d&orer les Troubadours ; elles en avoJRit tissu les Couronnes, qu 'elles donnoient comme la recompense des talens poetiques consaorfe alors k cdl^brer la valeur et la galanterie." (See also Marchangy, " La France au XIV*™^ Si^ole," torn, i., p. 11.) Genus Perdix. PARTRIDGE . {Perdix cinerea) (French. Perdrix.) 1. The dialectical forms of this are Patrick (West Riding ; Lancashire). Pertrick (Aberdeen). Pairtrick (East Lothian). Paitrick (Ayrshire). So Bums, in his lines on the death of Captain Henderson : — " Mourn, ye wee sangaters of the wood ! Ye grouse that crop the heather bud ! Ye curlews calling through a clud ! Ye whisking plover I And mourn, ye whirring paitrick brood ! ' , He's gane for ever ! " 2. Partridges pair early in the year, hence the French proverb — " Quand la Chandeleur (Feb. 2nd) est arrived, La perdrix grise est marine." And the Bohemians declare that " St. George (April 23rd) finds eggs in their nests." The young are able to fly about three weeks after being hatched, and soon attain their full growth ; whence the saying : — " A la Saint Rdme (Oct. Ist) Les perdreaux sont perdrix." 3. The flesh of no game bird is so delicate ; only one point is wanting : — " If the partridge had the woodcock's thigh It would be the best bird that ever did fly." In some districts of France, it is said, the weight of the partridges found on an estate is considered as a fair standard test of the productiveness of the soil and of the state of agricultural skill. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 173 4. Folk lore of tte partridge. a. The Bohemians believe that the flight of a partridge over a house prog- nosticates its destruction by fire. b. Aldrovandus aaserts that tame partridges cry out loudly when poison is being prepared in the house. c. Thiers, in his work on " Superstitions," vol. i. , p. 274, declares that a sick man cannot die easily on a bed stuffed with the wiug feathers of a partridge. In' England, pigeon feathers are supposed to. have the same property (see p. 168). d. SS. Jerome and Augustine declare that Satan often assumes the form of & partridge. Genus Cotuenix. QUAIL (Cotiirnix communis). Fr. Oaille. . 1. Names derived from its call-note. Weet my feet (East Lothian ; North of Ireland). Wet ihy lip (West Norfolk). Quick me dick (Oxfordshire). Compare the French — Paye tes dettes. J'ai du bl6 ; j'ai pas de sac (Berry). Tres pour un ; tres per uu (Provence). And the Swiss Ta-tatataye. 2. Folklore. a. In Swabia the peasants infer the price of corn during the coming autumn from the number of times the quail utters in the fields its cry, which they saj is " Sechs Paar Week, sechs Paar Week ! " Ttus, if it cries three times, corn will be three gulden a bushel. The same belief prevails in Tuscany, the centre and west of France, and Switzerland. In the Department lie et Vilaiae, there is a proverb — " Plus la caille carcaille Plus chfere est la semaUle." While in Tyrol it is said that the number of years during which a youth will remain unmarried corresponds with the number of cries that the quail utters when first heard by him in the spring. b. It was the quail who taught masons how to lay stones. A mason was about to build a wall, and did not know how to make a stone stand properly, when a quail behind him cried out, "Bout pour bout!" and so the mason knew how to place his stones. (Haute Bretagne.) c. " The quail is the earliest bird of spring, and thus of the early morning ; hence Ortygia (Quail land), is mentioned in. some legends as the birthplace of Phoebus and Artemis, the sun-god and his sister. So, too, in the Teutonic myth of Iduna, Wuotan and all the Maie lamented her when she was stolen away ; the trees shed frozen tears, and the sun withdrew his face, until Loki 174 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. brought her back in the form of a quail." (Cox, "Mythology of the Aryan Nations," vol. ii., p. 298.) 3. Migration of quails. There ie an old legend, mentioned by Buffon, that the quails have a king to conduct their migrations, and that they select the corncrake for that office ; not choosing one of themselves, for the reason that, upon reaching their destination, the first of the band usually falls a victim to some bird of prey that is awaiting their arrival. ' Aristotle says they are led by an owl. (See above, under ," Eagle Owl," and also under " Corncrake.") 4. Origin of quails. "A quail is a bird known to all ; yet its nature is not easily known, for there is one thing concerning this unknown. For, when there are great storms upon the coasts of Libya Deserta the sea casts up great tunnies on the shore, and these breed worms for fourteen days, and grow to be as big as flies, then as locusts, which, being augmented in bigness, become birds called quails." (From " The Magick of Kirani, King of Persia," 1685.) 5. Properties of the quail. " Dissolve the eyes of a quaU, or a sea tench, with a little water in a glass vessel, for seven days, then add a little oil ; put a little of this in the candle, or only anoint a rag, and light among the company, and they will look on them- selves like devils on fire, so that every one will run his way. — In the sardonyx stone engrave a quail, and put under its feet a sea tench, and put a little of the aforesaid confection under the stone in the hollow of the ring, and no man shall see you if you do anything in the house ; no, not if you should take anything away that ia in the house." (.Id.) 6. Flesh of the quail. The flesh of the quail, though in high esteem in our own days, was supposed by ancient authors to be very heating and unwholesome, from the bird's fondness for poisonous plants. This was Pliny's opinion; and so Lucretius ■vh:ites ; — " Praeterea nobis veratrum est acre venenum At capreis adipes et cotumioibus auget." (" De R^r. Nat.," vol. iv., p. 642.) Family TeteaonidjE. Gernis Lagopus. PTARMIGAN [Lagopus mutus) — Grael. Tarmachan. White game. White grouse. Grey ptarmigan. Eock grouse. White partridge. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 175 RED GBOTJSE (^Lougopus saoticics). 1. Various names. Red or brown ptarmigan. Moor game, or Moor fowl. Red game. Poot wren. 2. a. The male bird is called Gorcock, or Moorcock. b. The female Moorhen. The Gaelic term for the male bird is Coileach-fraoch — i.e. heather cook ; and for the f epaale Oearc fraoch — i.e. heather hen. 3. Cry of the grouse. Sounds like the words ' Go, go, go, go back, go-o back ! ' But Mr. MoGillivray ("British Birds," i., p. 181), says "that the Celts, naturally imagining the mogrcock to speak Gaelic, interpret it as signifying — 'Co, oo, co, Co, mo- chlaidh, mo-cUaidh ! ' — ix. ' Who, who, who, who (goes there ?) my sword my sword ! ' " Mr. Campbell, in his "West Highland Tales," i., p. 277, explains it thus : — This is what the hen says — " Faic thus-a 'n la ud 's 'n la ud eile." And the cock, with his deeper vpice, replies — " Faic thus-a 'n cnoc ud 's 'u cnoo ud eHe." (i.e. ' See thou younder day, and yon other day. ' See thou younder hiljj and yon other hill.') 4. " The female of the red grouse always had the reputation of keeping away from the haunts of nlen : hence the rhyme, ' The muirhen has sworn by her tough skin She sail never ea,t of the carle's win ' — but now she makes light of the oath.'' (Chambers' " Popular' Rhymes," p 196.) Genus Teteao. BLACK GROUSE {Tetrao tetrix). 1. Also called Black game. Heath fowl. Heath poult. 176 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 2. a. The male bird is called Black cock. . Heath cock. h. The female Grey hen. Brown hen. Heath hen. 3. By its crowing at dawn,'" says McGillivray, " the evil spirits of night are put to flight or deprived of their power." CAPERCAILZIE (Tetrao urogallm). Also called Cock of the wood. Cock of the mountain. Wood, or Great grouse. Order ruLicARi^. Family RALLiDiE. Genus Eallus. WATER-RAIL '{Ballus aquatims). 1. Called " rail " from its harsh cry (Old Dutch rallen, short for ratelen, to rattle).* 2. From its quiet, stealthy habjt of running, it has the names Velvet runner. Brook runner. Skitty (Somerset). From " skit," to slide. Grey skit (Devon). Skitty coot (Devon ; Cornwall). Skitty cock (Do.) 3. Various names. Bilcock (Nprth). Brook' ouzel. Gutter cock (Cornwall), Darcock. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 177 Genus Porzana. SPOTTED CRAZE {PorzaTia maruetla). Tor " crake " see under Com Crake. Also called Water crake. Spotted rail. Spotted water-hen. Skitty, or Spotted skitty (Devon). See preceding, 2. Genus Crex. CORN CRAKE {Grex pratensis). 1. So called from its harsh cry ; whence, and from high grass and corn being its favourite haunts, are derived Creek, Cracker, or Craker (Korth ; Salop). Bean crake, or Bean cracker (South Pembroke), Com drake (North Biding). Grass drake (West Riding). Meadow drake (Notts). Land drjtke (Salop). Gorse duck. GaUwell (1 Gallinule) drake. Corn scrack (Aberdeen). Daker (Surrey). Daker hen (Westmoreland). The latter appellation has been deriyed from the Norwegian Ager-hoene (i.e. the cock of the field) ; Danish, Aker-rixe {i.e. King of the acre) ; but it seems most probable that it has its origin from the bird's cry. Landrail (General). Cf. Bale de terre (France). 2. Superstitions connected with the corn crake. In the north .of Scotland it is regarded as s " blessed bird," and ranks with the lark and red grouse. It is also believed not to leave the country, but to remain torpid during the winter. In Ireland the popular opinion is that it becomes a water rail. ' Brehm, in " La Vie des Animaux," says that "country-people maintain that this bird governs and acts as a leader to the quails ; and Greek hunters declare positively that a com crake is at the head of each flock of quails." (See under - Quail and Eagle Owl.) Hence the names JRoi des caUles (France) ; Be di quaglie (Italy) ; Rei/ de las eodomices (Spain) ; WachtelMnig (Germany). 12 178 PEOVmClAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Geniis Gallinula. MOOB. HEIf {Gallinula cliloropus). 1. So called from the nature of its favourite haunts; whence also Water hen. Water rail. Moat hen, or Marsh hen. Morant — 1 Moor-ent (galop). Stank hen, or Stankie (East Lothian). " Stank '' =a still pond or pool "Stagnum. 2. Its short bob-tail has given it the names of * Cuddy. Moor coot. Kitty coot (Dorset). See under Coot. 3. Various names. Nightbird (Sussex). From its dark plumage. Bilcock, or BUter (North country). Skitty (Somerset). These two names are also applied to tlie water rail. Dabchick (Salop). S'ee under Little Grebe. Genus Fulica. COOT {Fuliaa atra). ; (From Welsh cwta = short. The Welsh name for the bird is Cwta-iar — i.e. Bob-tailed hen.) 1 . From the white bare spot above the bird's bill it is called ' Bell kite — i.e. Bald coot (Scotland generally). Bald duck, or Bald coot (Somerset). Bel poot — 4.e. Bald-powt, or -fowl (East Lothian). Smyth (Orkney Isles). From Icel. Snaud-ur = bare ; Old German Snoed. White-faced diver (Ireland). 'PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 179 2. Various names. Black diver (Ireland). Water crow (Dumfries). From its black plumage. Cf. DiaMe de mar (Provence). Whistling duck (B«nfrew). Queet. 1 i.q. Coot. Cf . Queute (Seine Inferieure). 3. Coot custard fair. At Horsey, in Norfolk, a fair used to be held every spring called Coot custard fair, because all the sweets were made from eggs of the coot and black-headed gull (Stevenson). 4. Proverbial sayings. "" ' ' ■a. "As bald as a coot." (See above, 1.) h. "As mad as a coot." (Cornwall.) Order LiMicoLiE. FalnUy (Edicnemid^ Cfenvs CEdicnemus. STONE CURLEW {CEdicnemus scolopax). So called from its frequenting stony localities and uttering a cry resembling the sound of the word " curlni." - Cf. Courli (Normandy), CourUs de terre (C6te d'Or). 1. The knees of this bird, when young, have a thick or swelled Appearance ; hence its names Thick knee. v Thick- kneed bustard. And the Latin title, (Edionemus. 2. Various names. Norfolk plover. Great plover. Stone plover. Bustard. 180 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. , FamvUy CharadeiiDjE, Genus Charadrius. GOLDEN PLOVER {Charadrius pluviaUs). The French term pluvier (whence our name, Plover), is applied to these birds, according to Littr6, because they arrive in flocks in the rainy season. Another authority considers that they are so called " parce-qu'on les prend mieux en temps pluvieux qu'en nulle autre saison," while the old BngUsh naturalist Charle- ton says that the epithet pluviaUs is given " quia loca imbribus madida et paludes frequentat " (" Onomast. Zoic," p. 109 : 1668). 1. From the colour of the plumage, which varies according to ,. age and the season of the year, they are called Grey plover (Ireland). Yellow plover (East Lothian). Black-breasted plover (Ireland). From the colour of the breast in summer. 2. Various names. Whistling plover (Norfolk ; Renfrew). From its soft clear call. / " And in the plover's shrilly strain, The signal whiatle 's heard again," *, (" Lady of the Lake," Cant. V., stanza xi.) , ^, Burns also speaks of . '| " The deep-toned plover gray, wild whistling on the hill." :, Hill plover (Forfar). Plover (Roxburgh). The Gaelic name for the golden plover is feadagk. 3. Superstitions attached to the golden plover. (o) In the Middle Ages it was believed that the plover lived on the wind. (See Littr^, 8ub " Pluvier.") (6) The Seven Whistlers. (See also under Redwing, Curlew, Wild Goose.) '• One evening, a few years ago, when crofesing one of our Lancashire moors, in company with an intelligent old man, we were suddenly startled byithe whistling overhead of a covey of plovers. My companion remarked that, when a boy, the old people considered such a circumstance a bad omen, ' as the person who heard the wandering Jews,' as he called the plovers, 'was sure to be overtaken with some ill-luck.' i On questioning my friend on the name given to the birds, he said, ' There is a tradition -that they contain the souls of ' those Jews who assisted at the Crucifixion, and in consequence were doomed to float in the air for ever ! ' When we arrived at the foot of the moor, a coacli, by which I had hoped to complete my journey, had already left its station, thereby causing me to finish the distance on foot. The old man reminded' me of the omen." (Mr. Jas. Pearson, Notes and Queries, Ser. IV., vol. viii., p. 268.) PRO VINCI A.L. NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 181 The Leicestershire colliers also believe that the cry of the Seven Whistlers ■warns them of some calamity, and, on hearing it, refuse to descend into the ■ pit till the next day. It is said that they were heard before the great Hartley colliery explosion, and also that at Wigan. In South Shropshire and Worcestershire the Seven Whistlers are considered to be " seven birds, and the six fly about continually together looking for the seventh, and wHenthey find him the world will come to an end " (" Shropshire Folk Lore," p. 232). The superstitions connected with the Seven Whistlers are interwoven with the Gabriel Hounds and Odin's Spectre Hunt, for a full account and explara- tion^ of which see Mr. Baring Gould's most interesting work, " Iceland, its Scenes and Sagas," pp. 199, 203. c. The Saviour and the golden plovers. " Once on a Sabbath, Christ, in company with other Jewish children, amused Himself in fashioning birds out of clay. " After that the children had amused themselves awhile herewith, one of the Sadduoees chanced to come up to them. He was very old and very zealous, and he rebuked the children for spending their Sabbath in so profane an em - ployment. And he let it not rest at chiding alone, but went to the clay birds and broke them all, to the great grief oi the children. •' Now, when Christ saw this. He waved His hands over all the birds He had. fashioned, and they became forthwith alive, and soared up into the heavens. " And these birds are the golden plovers, whose note ' deerriu ' sounds like to the Iceland word ' dyrdhin. ' namely, ' glory ' : for these birds sing praise to their Lord, for in that He mercifully saved them from the merciless band of the Sadducee." (Quoted by B. Harris Cooper, in his " Apocryphal Gospels," Introduc- tion, p. xxxii.) (d) In Scotland it is said that the Golden plover, in the spring time, continually gives in its song this advice to the labourer, " Pleugh weel, shave (i.e. sow) weel, harrow weel " (Aberdeen). Genits Squataeola. GREY PLOVER {Sqvatarola helvetica). 1. Called grey from its winter plumage, which is grey above and white below, whence also Grey sandpiper (obsolete). 2. Its habit of frequenting the sea-shore has obtained for it the names Sea plover. Sea cock (Waterford). Strand plover (Cork). Mud plover. 'Stone plover (North and South Ireland). Kock plover (Wexford). 3. Also called Whistling plover. EuU head. From the round shape of the head. 182 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Swiss sandpiper. Cf. Pluvier, or Vanrheau iSuisse (France). So called because M. de Reaumur first received specimens from Switzerland. / ■ 4. Mufifett, ia his "Health's ImproTement, " quotes a proverb, "A grey- plover cannot please him," as applied to a discontented person, which shows that the bird was highly esteemed as food. (Phipson.) Genus ^eiALiTis. KIITGED PLOVER {^gialMs Maticula). 1. So called from its white collar ; whence also Ring dotterel. Ringlestone (Norfolk ; Sir Thos. Browne). Cf. Blanc collet (Savoie). 2. From the localities in which, it is found this bird derives the names Sea or Sand lark (General). Sjandy loo. Sandy laverock (Orkney, Shetland Isles). Sea dotterel (obsolete). Stonehatch (Norfolk). Stone runner (do.) Stone plover (General). Referring to its habit~of pecking and searching among the pebbles above high- . water mark. 3. Various names. Dul willy. Bull's eye (Ireland). From its large prominent black eye. Knot (Belfast). Grundling — i.e. Groundling (Lancashire). . Genus Eudromias; DOTTEREL' (ISudromias morineUus'). 1 . The English and Latin names, dotterel and morineUus, are both expressive of stupidity. The former is derived from " dote," PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 183 IVench radoter, and is the same as dolt or dotard. The latter is the Latin diminutive of juupos, a fool. The Highlanders call this bird An tamadan mointich, which means "peat-bog fool." 2. Various names. Stone runner (Korfolk). Dot plover (do.) Wind (South of England). 3. Weather prognostic. " When dotterel do first appear, It shows that frost is very near ; But when that dotterel do go, Then you may look for heavy snow." (Wiltshu-q.) 4. Superstitions regarding the dotterel. "It is a silly bird," says Willoughby, "but as an article of food a great delicacy. It is caught in the night by lamplight, iu accordance with the movements of the fowler. For if he stretch out his arm the bird extends a wing ; if he a leg, the bird does the same. In sjiort, whatever the fowler does the dotterel does the same. And so intent is it on the movements of its pursuer, that, it is unawares entangled in the net." Drayton refers to this in the lines — ■ " The dotterel, vjhich we think a very dainty dish, Whose taking makes such sport, as no man. more could wish : For as you creep, or cower, or lie, or stoop, or go, So marking you with care the apish bird dgth do ; And acting everything, doth never mark the net, Till he be in the snare which men for him have set." (Song 26, p. 1164.) . And Beaumont and Fletcher — " See, they stretch out their legs like dotterels." {Sea Voyage, Act iii.) While Ben Jonson writes : " Bid him put ofif his hopes of straw, and leave To spread his nets in view thus. Though they take Master Fitz-dottrel, I am no such foul, Nor, fair one, tell Mm, wiU be had with stalking." [The Devil is an Ass, Act ii., sc. 1.) Genus Vanellus. LAPWING (Vanelius vulgaris). A. -6. hledp-udnce-Ut, one who turns about in running ; from A.-S. Medp-cm, to run, and wince, one who turns. Other forms of which are Lipwingle (Beds). 184 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BKITISH BIRDS. Lymptwigg (Exmoor). Flopwing. 2. From its wailing cry this bird has received the following names : — Peewit (general). Piewipe, Peweep (Norfolk). Puit (Essex ; Suffolk ; Norfolk ; Sussex). Peaseweep (Stirling ; Forfar). Hence the children's rhyme — , " Pease weep, pease weep, Harry my nest and gar me greet." Weep or Wype. Tewhit or Tee-wheep (Kirkcudbright ; Orkney Isles). Teufit (Cleveland). Teuchit (Forfar). Tuet ("Westmoreland ; Lancashire ; West Riding). Teeuck. Tieves nicket, or Tieves geit (Shetland Isles). Of. Dix-huit (France) ; Eiehitz, Kiwitt (Germany). Phillipene (Ireland). 3. Also called Hornpie (Norfolk ; East Suffolk). Horneywink (Cornwall). From the long crest, like a horn, projecting from the back of its head. Cf. the Gaelic name Adharcan-luachrach {i.e. Httle horn of the rushes). Green plover (Ireland). Cornwillen (Cornwall). Old maid (Worcestershire). This name appears to be connected with the Danish legend given by Mr. Atkinson in Notes and Queriea, Ser. III., x. 49, who says, quoting Molbeoh's " Danish Dialect Lexicon," that in one district of Denmark the pease-weeps are held to be metamorphosed old maids, the extinct old bachelors being still to be found in the form of green sandpipers. The former fly restlessly about the bogs and moors, which are the common dwelling:j)laceB of themselves and the sandpipers, pitifully and unceasingly exclaiming, " Hvi vi' do it ? hvi vi' do it?" ('Oh I why wouldn't you?') Whereupon the sandpipers (to whom tie plaintive question is addressed) in their turn, and on the wing too, reply " Fo we turr it, fo we turr it" ('because we d^re not'), with the closing peal of insulting laughter, " Haa ! ho 1 hoa I" which is constantly heard from the birds in question. 4. Habits of the lapwing. The young of the lapwing run "directly they are hatched ; hence the saying — generally used to express great forwardness — that " the lapwing runs with the PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 185 shell on his head." This is said by Horatio of Osric (see Hamlet, Act v., so. 2), and Ben Jonson quotes it in his Staple of News, Act iii., so. 2 : " Such as are bald and barren beyond hope Are to be separated and set by For ushers to old countesses ; and coachmen To mount their boxes reverently, and drive Like lapwings with a shell upon their heads Thorow the streets." On which Nares remarks that the bald head being uncovered would give them that appearance. During the season of incubation, the cock bird tries to draw pursuers from the- nest by wheeling round them, crying and screaming, to divert their attention. ■ To this habit Shakespeare alludes in the Comedy of Errors, Act iv., sc. 2. " Far from her nest the lapwing screams away," while the female sits close on the nest till disturbed, when she runs off, feigning lameness, or flaps about near the ground, as if she had a broken wing. !So in Much Ado about Nothing, Act iii., sc. 1 . " Look where Beatrice, like a lapwing, runs Close by the ground to hear our conference." 5. The lapwing is almost universally held in bad esteem (except for its fle.sh apd eggs), as is shown by the various titles and legends, in which it plays a part. Mr. Atkinson, in Notes and Queries, Ser. III., vol. X., p. 49, mentions the two following as being current in Denmark. " When our Lord was a wee bairn He took a walk out one day, ^nd came to an old crone who was busy baking. She desired Him to go and split h>er a little wood for the oven, and ehe would give Him a new cake for His trouble. He did as He was bid, and the old woman went on wi*h her occupation, sundering a very small portion of the dough for the promited recompense. But when the batch was drawn this cake was equally large with the rest. So she took a new morsel of the dough, still less than before, and made and baked another cake, but with the like result. Hereupon she broke out with ' That's a vast over-muokle cake for the likes o' you ; thee's get thy cake anither time.' When our Lord saw her evil disposition His wrath was stirred, and He said to the woman, ' I split your wood as you asked me, and you would not so much as give me the little cake you promised me. Now you phall go and cleave wood, and that, too, as long as the world endures !' With that He changed her into a weep (n^pa). So the weep fares betwixt heaven and earth as long as the world lasts ; and fare where she will, she says other words never, save ' Klyf vtd ! klyf ved !' (cleave wood ! cleave wood !)" " While as our Lord hung yet upon the cross, there came three birds flying over. The first was the stork, who cried 'Stjrk ham ! styrkham 1' (strengthen Him) ; and hence the bird's name and the blessings which go with her. The second cried, ' Sval ham ! sval ham I' (cool or refresh Him) ; so she cane tj be called the swallow, and is also a bird of blessing. But the last was the weep, who shrieked 'Piin ham 1 piin ham I' (pine Him, make Him suffer), and therefore she is accursed for ever down to the last day." (Thiele's " Danish Traditions," ii. 304.) With this may be compared the Russian legend given by Mr. Ralston (see page 61), who also quotes the followine; from Tereschenko's "Buit Russkago Naroda " (' Manners and Customs of the Russian People ' ), v. 47. 186 PliOVmCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. When Goi created the earth, and determined to supply it with seaa, lakes, and rivers, He ordered the birds to convey the waters to their appointed places. They all obeyed except this, bird, which refused to fulfil its duty, saying that it had no need of seas, lakes or rivers, to slake its thirst. Then the Lord waxed wroth, and forbade it and iU posterity ever to approach a sea or stream, allowing it to quench its thirst with that water only which remains in hollows and among stones after rain. From that time it 'has never ceased its wailing cry of " Peet-peet " — i.e., ' drink, drink.' (See above, under Green "Woodpecker aadKite.) In Sweden it is believed that the lapwing was once a handmaiden of the Virgin Mary, who stole the scissors of her mistress, and as a punishment' was transformed into a bird bearing a tail forked like a pair of scissors, and in- cessantly uttering the cry, "Tyvit, tyvit" — i.e. ('I stole them, I stole them.') Mortanus tells us that in some parts of Germany this bird is called " the Virgin Mary's dove." In the south of Scotland the peasantry bear it a traditional antipathy, arising from the raids upon the Covenanters by Claverhouse and Dalyell of Binns, whose troopers were directed to their hiding-places by its cries of alarm. Hence its name of "the ungrateful bird." Leyden alludes to this in the lines " And though the pitying sun withdraws his light, The lapwing's clamorous whoop attends their flight ; Pursues their steps where'er the wanderers go, Till the shrill scream betray them to the foe. Poor bird I where'er the wandering swain intrudes, On thy bleak heaths and desert solitudes, He corses still thy scream and clamorous tongue, And crushes with his foot thy moulting young." A legend of a different character is given by Yarrell, vol. ii., p. 483, which tells us how the founder of the ancient Lincolnshire family of the Tyrwhitts, having fallen wounded in a morass during a skirmish, would have perished had not the cries of the lapwings hovering over him attracted his followers to the spot. In memory of this deliverance he assumed tljree peewits as his device. In Eastern story the lapwing is mentioned as having the power of finding water underground in the desert, to which Moore refers in the lines — " Fresh as the fountain underground When first 't is by the lapwing found." (" Lalla Rookh.") WhUe another poet has ascribed to the bird a vinous taste : — " The blackbird far its hues shall know, As lapwing knows the vine." A Kabbinical legend, given at length by Mr. Baring Gould (" Old Testament Characters," vol. ii., p. 190), relates how this bird incurred the anger of Solomon by her non-appearance at an assembly of every species of fowl which he had convoked, and how she excused herself by relating her visit to the Queen of Sheba, as messenger to whose court the King afterwards despatched her. (See under Hoopoe, p. 107.) Another Eastern tale respecting this bird is as follows : " The lapwing was once a princess, who hearing of the return of a favourite brother long absent, in her anxiety to meet him with some refreshment, snatched up a pot of hot milk from the fire, and placing it on her head, hurried out in the direction in which he was falsely said to be coming, heedless of the burn caused by the heated vessel. Unavailing for yearfe she sought for this brother, calling out ' Brother, brother ! ' until Allah, moved by compassion, gave her wings, and changed her into a lapwing, the better to accomplish her purpose ; hence the bird is so often seen wheeling round in long flights, as if in quest-of some one. PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIKDS. 187 uttering a melancholy cry resembling ' Brotter, brother ! ' The Moham- medan women call the lapwing 'the sister of the brother,' and when they hear its cry in the evening, run from their houses and throw water in the air; that the bird may use it to assuage the pain of the burn on the top of the head, BtiU marked by some black feathers." (Jones, " Credibilities Past and Present," p. 382.) The Tuchit's storm. "Frequently," says McGillivray, "in the middle of March', storms come on with snow and hail, and this so commonly happens in the eastern districts of the middle division of Scotland (especially in Kincardine) that the people always expect what they call the ' Tuchit's storm ' about the time of the arrival of that bird." Lapwings laying in an easterly position. " I have heard it affirmed that lapwings doe lay their eggs on the east side of a hill, and lett the sun hatch them : and that one has taken of the egges, and layd them in an east window and they were hatched, sed quaere de hoc" (Royal Soc. M.S. Aubrey's " Nat. Hist, of Wilts," folio 161 ; quoted in Britten's edit, of his " GentUisme and Judaisme," p. 259). The lapwing has always been highly prized as a delicacy for the table. Thus the French have a proverb : — " Qui n'a mang^ grive ni vanneau N'a jamais mang^ bon morceau." And in the neighbourhood of Nice they say — " Se vuoE mangeb. de buoi mousseii Mangea becassin, pluvife e vaneii." Genus Sthepsilas. TXTRN'STONE {Strepdlas interpres). 1. So called from the bird's habit of tumiag over small stones with its bill to get at the marine insects, etc., underneath them. Cf. Toume pierre (Fi'ance) ; Memdve piedras (Spain) ; VoUa pietre (Italy) ; whence also Stanepecker (Shetland Isles). Tangle picker (Norfolk). " Tangle is a kind of weed beset with small bladders." (Gumey). . 2. Various names. Sea dottrel (Norfolk). Equivalent to the Welsh Huttdn-y-mor. Sea lark (Ireland). Stone raw (Armagh). Skirl crake (East Lothian ; Shetland Isles). Hence the Latin interpm, because it gives a warning cry to other birds on the approach of daflger. 188 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Genus H^matopus. OYSTER CATCHER {Hcematopus ostrilegus). 1. So called from the bird's partiality to shell moUusca, whence also Oyster plover. Cf. Huitrier (France). Mussel pecker (Belfast ; Forfar). 2. Froin its deep blpck and pure white plumage, resembling that of the magpie, are derived the names Pienet. Sea pie (Cornwall ; Norfolk ; Lancashire j East Lothian). Of. Pie de mer (France). Sea piet. Sea pilot (corruption of preceding). 3. Various names. Olive (Essex). Tirma, Trillichan (Hebrides). Chalder, Chaldrick (Orkney Isles). Obsolete. Scolder (Orkney Isles). From the loud shrill noise it makes when any one approaches its young. Skeldrake or Skieldrake (Orkney Isles). See under Sheldrake. Krocket (Aberdeen). Dickie bird (Norfolk). 4. The oyster catcher's cry. "Bi Olic, Bi Glic (Bee Gleerhlc) — 'be wise '—eay the oyster catchers, when a stranger comes near their haunts." (Campbell's " West Highland Tales," i. 27,5.) Family Scolopacid^h. Genus Recurvieostra. AVOCET {EecuTvirostra avocetta). 1. From the peculiar shape of its long and pointed beak it has received the names of Cobbler's awl, or Cobbler's awl duck. Crooked bill. Picarii}i. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 189 2. Also called Butterflip. Scooper. - Because it seoopa up the mud to obtain food . Yelper. From its sharp shrill cry. Clinker. I Genus Scolopax. "WOODCOCK {Scolopax rus^aula). 1. (a) The prefix is often omitted, and the bird called simply " cock." So in German, Waldschnepfe, Sohnepfe. (h) From the length of its bill it has the name of Longbill. Of. Beoasse (France) ; Becoacoia (Italy). (c) Called Quis in Wiltshire. 2. Arrival of the woodcock. The earliest come about the 20th of October ; hence the proverb — " Cuckoo oats and woodcock hay ,— Make a farmer run away " {i.e., if the spring is so backward that the oats cannot be sown till the cuckoo is heard, or the autumn so wet that the after crop of liay cannot be gathered in till the woodcocks come over, the farmer is sure to come to great loss). The French have the following sayings on the coming of this bird : — (a) " A'la Saint Fran9ois (October 14th) La b^casse est au bois." (6) " Quand arrive la Saint Denis (October 9) Les b^oaases sont au pays." (Poitou.) (c) The Breton peasants say, " Ala foire Saint Pol (October 10th) b&aSse sur table.'' In P'russia the passage of the woodcock occurs in spring, and the third Sunday in Lent is called Woodcock Sunday, hence the rhyme of the foresters — " 0-kuli-da kommen sie ; ' Latare-ist das Wahre ; Judika-auch nooh da ; Palmarum-rarum. " Oeali-ia the third Sunday in Lent, from the Introit, taken from Psalm xxv. 14 ;■ Liilwe (i.e. Lmtm-e) is the following Sunday, the Introit for which is Isaiah Ixvi. 10. Jvdka is Passion Sunday, Introit Psalm sliii. 1 ; PaLmarum, Palm Sunday. 190 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIRDS. 3. . Woodcock as prognosticating the weather. - " Woodcocks," says Gilbert White, "have been observed to be remarkably listless against snowy, foul weather." Their early arrival and continued abode, according to Phillips, are signs of plenty : " The woodcock's early visit, and abode • For long continuance in our temperate clime. Foretells a liberal harvest. " 4. Stupidity of the woodcock. The woodcock was supposed to have no brains ; hence its name, says Hart'ng, became a synonym for a fool. This is mentioned by WiUoughby in his " Orni- thology " (iii. 1, § 1), who, however, gives no reason for the bird's ill repute. Amoug Us in England, this bird is infamous for its simplicity or folly ; so that a Woodcock is proverbially used for a simple, foolish person. It is to this that Claudio alludes when he says, " Shall I not find a woodcock too ? " (Much Ado ahaiit Nothing, Act v., sc. 1). In France " b^casse " has become synonymous with a noodle, and " bider la bfeasse " is equivalent" to making a fool of any one. It has been suggested that the bird acquired this character from the facility with which it was taken in springes and nets. " Springes for Woodoookes " was part of the title of an old book of epigrams, by H. Perrot ; and in Beaumont and Fletcher's Loyai Subject, Act iv,, sc. 4, we find " Go, like the wopdoock, And thrust your head into the noose." 5. Time of feeding. It is about twilight that the woodcock begins to stir and repairs to its feed- ing ground, flying generally low, and making for the nearest open passage in the wood. In these passages, which were caUed " cock-shoots," the fowlers used to set nets suspended between two poles, against which the birds flew, and were entrapped. Hence, " cockshut time," of which Shakespeare speaks, Mchard III., Act v., sc. 3, iS the evening, when the woodcocks run or fly out of the covers, and are caught in the nets. 6. In the time of the Elizabethaij dramatists, tobacco pipes were often called "woodcock's heads, "from their Kkeuess to the bird's head and bill. So Ben Jonson writes in JEverj/ Man out of his Humour, Act iii., sc. 3 : — " Fastid. Will your ladyship take any ? " Satiplina. peace, I pray thee ! I Ipve not the breath of a woodcock's bead. " Fastid. Meaning my head, lady ? (See above, 1.) " Sa/iiolina. Not altogether so, sir ; but as it were fatal to their follies that think to grace themselves with taking tobacco, when they want better enter- tainment, you see your pipe bears the true form of a woodcock's head. " Fastid. rare similitude ! " 7. In some parts of the West-country it is believed that in peculiarly favourite spots a certain number of woodcocks is always found — that, in short, whenever any of the birds are shot, the same number as before is made up again. , PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 191 8. Migration of woodcocks to the moon. This was an old belief, cun-ent even in the last century. So Pope writes ; — " Know God and nature only are the same, In man the judgment shoots at higher game, A bird of passage gone as soon as found, Now in the moon perhaps, now underground." And Gay, in the " Shepherd's Walk : "— " He sung where woodcocks in the summer feed, ' And in what climates they renew their breed : Some think to northern coasts their flight they tend. Or to the moon in midnight hours ascend." The reason for this extraordinary supposition is given in a tract contained in the " Harleian Miscellany," ii. 583 : " An Inquiry into the Physical and Literal Sense of that Scripture — ' Yea, the stork in the heaven knoweth her appointed times : and the turtle and the crane and the swallow observe the time of their coming ' (Jeremiah viii. 7)." The author thinks that if storks and other inigrating birds winged their flight, at their periods of migration, in a horizon- tal direction, they must have been observed by travellers ; therefore he qfgues "that the stork, and the like may be said of other season-observing birds, till some place more flt can be assigned to them, does go unto, and remain in some one of the celestial bodies, and that must be the moon, which is most likely because nearest, and bearing most relation to this our earth, as appears in the Coperniean system : yet is the distance great enough to denominate the pas- sage thither an itineration or journey." He further proceeds to state that the birds occupied two months in their upward and the same in their downward flight, while they remained three months in the lunar world. The same writer remarks, with reference to woodcocks, that " in them it is remarkable that upon a change of the wind to the east, about AUhallows tide, they will seem to' have come all in a night ; for though the former day none are to be found, yet the next morning they wiU be in every bush. I speak of the West of England, where they are most plentifuj. " (For " Woodcock pilot " see above, under Goldcrest, p. 25). Genus (jtAllinago. GREAT SNIPE {GalUnago major). Snipe, from Icel. stiipa, akin to Dutcli snip, a snapper. Called also double snipe, from its size. Cf . Becasdne double (France) ; DohhdC hehann (Norway). Solitary snipe. , Little woodcock, Woodcock snipe (Ireland). COMMON SNIPE {GalUnago ccelestis). 1. The peculiar drumming noise, caused by the rapid action of 192 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. the wings, when making a downward stoop, has obtained for this bird the names Heather bleater (Scotland ; Ireland). feog bleater (Ireland). Ern bleater. Horse gowk, or gawk (Orkney and Shetland Isles). Because the drumming is supposed to resemble the neighing of a horse. Pontoppidap, speaking of this noise, says, " The horse-gjog is as big as a'magpie ; it does not ory ' cuckoo ' like another cuckoo, but bleats like a goat, wherefore it has been called by some persons jord-geed= capreoZMS," The Scotch, Irish, and Welsh names for it all signify " air goat." Cf. GMvre volcmte, CMvre cSleste (France), Himmehiege (Germany). ' With reference to the above names for this bird, Grimm (" Deutsche Mytho- logie,"i. 184, Eng. transl.) -writes: — " Apparently some names of the snipe have to do with this subject — i.e. , with the God Thunar or Donar, Donnerziege (-goat), Donherstagspferd (' Thursday horse '), Himrndsziege {Oa^eUa coslesUs), because he seems to bleat or whinny in the sky (?) But he is also the Weather bird, Storm bitd, .Rain bird, and his flight betokens an approaching thunderstorm. Dan. Myrehest, Swed. Horsgjoh, Icel. Hross-agamhr, horsegowk or cuckoo, from his neighing. The first time he is heard in the year he prognosticates to men their fate (Biorn, sub voc,) ; evidently superstitious fancies cling to the bird. His Lettish name, pehrkonalcasa, pelvrkona ahm . (thunder's she-goat and he-goat) agrees exactly with the German. In Lithu- anian, too, Mieicke (i. 294, ii. 271) gives Perhuru) ozhys as Heaven's goat, for which another name is tikimtU." 2. Various names. \ Snite. Jill snipe (Ireland). See under Jack Snipe. Whole snipe. As distinguished from the smaller Jack snipe. Mire snipe (Aberdeen). Snippack (Shetland Isles). 3. Superstition concerning the snipe. In some parts of France tTxe female snipe is believed to be the devil's wife. 4. Weather prognostic. The drumming of the snipe in the air indicates dry weather and frost at night to the shepherds of Garrow (Scotland). 5. Proverbial sayings. There is winter enou'gh for the snipe and woodcock too. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS, 193 \ The snipe is accounted very delicate eating, hence the old French quat- rain : — " Le bdcasseau est de fort bon manger, Duquel la chair resueille I'appetet, II est ojseau passager et petit, Et par son goust fait des vins bien juger." Qeniis Limnocbtptes. JACK SNIPE {lAmmiooryftea gaMinula)^ In Ireland this species is commonly believed to be the male of the common snipe ; hence the latter is called Jill snipe, as distin- guished from the former. Of. Jaquet (Luxembourg). Also called Jedcock, Jid, or Juddock. Half snipe (Norfolk). From its small size, as contrasted with the whole, or common snipe. (See under " 'Whimbrel," p. 199.) Gaverhale (Devon). Genua Tringa. DTJNLIIT (Tringa alpina). So called from its colour. Cf.' Brunette-Orizette (France). Some derive the name from Grael. dun, a hill, and linne, a pool ; because it frequents the dunes and pools by the seaside. Various names. Purre, or Churre (Norfolk). Given to the dunlin when in winter plumage. Ox bird, or Ox eye (Essex; Kent). Stint (General). Sea snipe (North of England ; East Lothian). Sea lark (North Ireland ; East Lothian). Summer snipe. Jack snipe (Shetland Isles). Plover's page (West 'Scotland). Because so often seen in company with the golden plover. Dorbie (Banff). Pickerel (Scotland generally). A name applied tu all small waders, 13 194 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Sea peek (Forfar). Sea mouse (Lancashire ; Dumfries). Sand mouse (Westmoreland). Bundle (Orkney Isles). Ebb sleeper (Shetland Isles). From these birds resting themselves in the shallows — ebhs ; or from their posting themselves on the sand exposed by the ebbing tide. CURLEW SANDFIFER {Tringa mha/rquata). Pigmy curlew (Korfolk). PURPLE SANDPIPER {Tringa striata). So called from the prevailing bluish-grey colour of its plumage. Various names. Stanepecker (Shetland Isles). Because its favourite haunts are rooks along the sea-shore, where it picks' shell-fish from off the stones. Blind Dorbie (North Shetland). Bed legs (Caermarthen). KStOT (Tringa Gonutus). 1. So called, according to Camden, in honour of King Canute, " for out of Denmark they are thought to fly hither." Drayton writes of it : — " The knot, that caUedwas Cauutus' bird of old. Of that great Kingof Danes, his name that still doth hold ; His appetite to please, that far and near was sought, For him, as some have said, from Dermiark hither brought." (Song xxv.) Whence also Gnat; Knat ; Knet (Norfolk ; Sir Thos. Browne). Gnat snap. " The little gnat -snap, worthy princes' boords " (Du Bartas, p. 45). 2. From the colour of its summer plumage it has received the names Red sandpiper (Ireland). Black sandpiper. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 195 But the sober tints of its feathers in winter have caused it to be called Dunne (Belfast Lough). Ash-coloured sandpiper (Ireland). Cf. Taurterelle de mer (Arcachon). Grey plover (Scotland). Silver plover (Do.). ■ 3. Various names. Sea snipe (Dublin). Green -legged shank (Norfolk);. Male (Essex). Howster. Genus Machetes. RUrr {Machetes pugnax).. Said to be so called from a frill of feathers the cock bird wears round his neck during the spring, and early summer. The name of reeve is given to the female. At the end of the sixteenth' century we find these birds called " oxen and kine." Vide Introduction to "Expenses of the Judges of Assize, going the Western and Oxford circuits, between 1596 and 1601," reprinted in vol. xlv. of "Camden Miscellany," 1857 ; alsoBiohardiCarew's " Survey of Cornwall," 1602, p. 108. In Ficardy the male is called Pizon ; the female, Sotte, Genus Calideis. SANDERLING-: {Galidris arenaria). . Also called Sea lark (Ireland) j. Sand lark. Ox bird (Essex ; Kent).. Stint. These two latter names are given .to .the. Banderliiig in. common with the dunlin {Tringa alpma). Ruddy plover. The adult male in .summer plumage. Towwilly. Curwillet (porn wall). Names given to the sanderling from its cry. Cf. Guerlette {Seine Infirieure). PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Oenus Tringoides. COMMON SANDPIPER {Tringoides hypoleucus)^ 1. The piping note this bird utters when disturbed has given rise to its names of Heather peeper (Aberdeen). Watery pleeps (Orkney Isles). Killieleepsie (East Lothian). Kittie needie (Kirkcudbright). Willy wicket (North of England generally). Dickie-di-dee (Lancashire). Tatler. Weet weet. Called, for the same reason, Skillili, by the Lapps, who have made, as Mr. Lloyd informs us,i the following couplet on it : — " SkiUai ! Skaiili ! ! I carry, I carry, , An egg large as that of a Bipa, So that my tail cocks in the air." 2. From its fondness for the sandy margin of lakes and rivers it is called Sandie laverock. Sand lark (Ireland ; Scotland generally). Sanny — i.e. Sandie (Aberdeen). Sand snipe (West Riding). Shore snipe (Perth). Water junket. Water laverock (Roxburgh). 3. Various names. Summer snipe (England ; Scotland generally). Because it appears in April, and leaves again in September. Skittery deacon (Stirling). From a habit of the bird when rising to fly, on being suddenly alarmed. Fiddler (Hebrides). From the manner in which it continually vibrates its body, as if on a pivot. Shad bird (neighbourhood of Shrewsbury). " Before the erection of weirs at Worcester and other places on the Severn, shad used to ascend the river ; they came up about the middle of April, the time of the arrival of the common sandpiper ; and it is probable that the Severn fishermen, connecting the appearance of the bird with the advent of the shad- fishing season, gave to it the local appellation of shad-bird " (Jackson's " Shrop- shire Word-Book," p. 372). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 197 Steenie pouter (Orkney Isles). Bundle (Orkney Isles). Land tripper (Kirkcudbright). Genvs Helodromas. GREEN SANDPIPER {Helodromas ochropus). Also called Summer snipe (Norfolk) : see under preceding. Martin snipe (Do.) " From the white base of its tail feathers forming such a contrast to its dark body as to give it the appearance of a house martin" (Stevenson, "Birds of Norfolk "). Of. Oul ■ hlamc (Prance) ; hence the country-people in Haute Bretagne say, "When les cu hlancs fly low, it is a sign of wind." Horse gowk (Shetland Isles) : see " Common Snipe," 1. Icel. Hrossa-gaukr. Genus ToTANUs. REDSHANK {Tdtanus caUdris). 1. So called from the bright red colour of its feet and legs; whence also Red-leg (Norfolk). Red-legged snipe. Red-legged horiSeman. Of. Chevalier d, pieds rouges (France). 2. From its loud and piercing alarm cry it has received the names Teuk (Essex). Glee. Pellile (Aberdeen). Watery pleeps (Orkney Isles). 3. Also called Pool snipe. From its partiality to ooze and marsh. Sandcock. Shake (Connemara). From the constant nodding of its head while on the ground. 198 PKOVmCIAl NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. GEEENSHANK {Totanus canescena). Also called Green-legged horseman. From the colour and extreme length of its legs. Cf. Chevalier dpieds verts (France). ' Greater plover. Genus LiMOSA. BAR-TAIIED GODWIT {Limosa lapponica). 1. From A.-S. god = good, and wihta = an animal; therefore the meaning is, a bird good to taste and eat (see below, 6). For the same reason it is called Sea woodcock. Godwin (Ireland). 2. From its sharp cry, uttered when taking wLag, ai'e derived the names Yarwhelp, or Yarwhip. Yardkeep. Shrieker. Poor Willie (East Lothian). Their whistle resembling the utterance of these words. 3. From its similarity to the curlew in flight and colour of plumage, it is called Half whaup (Forfar). Half curlew (Norfolk). Mr. Johns says that the Norfolk fishermen give it this name because it possesses half the value of the curlew ? (But see " Whimbrel," 2.) 4. Various names. Stone plover. Pick (Norfolk). Prine (Essex). From its habit of probing the mud for food, Scammel (Norfolk). A name given to the female bird by the gunners of Blakeney. Fr. mm, which means a limpet (Stevenson, ii. 260). Perhaps referred to by Shakespeare (Jfeapes*, Act II., sc. 11.) ;— " Sometimes I'll get thee Young scammels from the rocks." PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 199 This seems preferable to'the reading " sea mells " (i.e. sea mews), owing to the godwit being a greater dainty than the gull. (See Aldis Wright's "Notes to the Tempest," 1875, pp. 120-1 ; and, for another suggestion, Dyce's " Shake- speare," i., p. 245. 5. The gunners on Breydon water are accustomed to call the 12th of May Godwit day, as then those birds begin to move southward. 6. Godwits, as their name denotes, were much esteemed as an article of food. Sir Thomas Browne calls them " the daintiest dish in England," and Ben Jonson writes in The Devil is an Ass, iii. 3— " Your eating Pheasant and godwit here in London, haunting The globes and mermaids ; wedging in with lords Still at the table," — while Dr. Thomas Muffett writes ("Health's Improvement," p. 99), " A fat godwit is so fine and light meat, that noblemen, yea, and merchants, too, by your leave, stick not to buy them at four nobles a dozen." BLACK-TAILED GODWIT (Limosa cegocephala). Also called Red godwit (Ireland). Small curlew, Jadreka snipe. Shrieker (Norfolk). See preceding, 2. Germs Numenius. WHIMBREL {Numenius phceopm). 1. A name given to this bird from its peculiar call; whence also Titterel (Sussex). 2. From its resemblance to a diminutive curlew it is called Curlew Jack. Curlew knot (Spalding). Stone curlew. Young curlew (Somerset). Half bird, or Half curlew (Norfolk). Cf. GorUeu (Bessin). Little whaup (East Lothian). Tang whaup (Shetland Isles). From their being found among the tang or seaweed, searching for crnstacea. (For whaup, see under Curlew.) 200 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 3. Because they appear in the month of May in greater numbers than at other times they have received the names of May birds (Norfolk ; Hebrides ; Ireland). May fowl (Ireland). May curlew ; May whaap (Ireland). 4. Various names. Brame (East Suffolk). Spowe (Norfolk) : obsolete. Spoi is the Icelandic name for thewhimbrel. (Southwell, note in Lubbock's " Fauna of Norfolk," p. 100.) CTJHLEW [Numienius arquata). . 1. This bird has two cries, viz. : a. A whistle of two syllables, resembling the name Cur-lew ; . so the French Courlis, or Gorlu ; Sardinian, Curridiu ; Maltese, GurUn. h. The other is harsher, and more guttural, hence the names Whaup or Stock whaup ; see below, 3... Awp. Great whaup (Orkney). Cawdy mawdy (North Country). . 2. Also called Jack Curlew (Salop). Curlew-help (Lancashire) : obsolete. Whitterick (East Lothian). "In Norfolk,'' says Stevenson, "the females are called 'great harvest curlews,' from their size, and because the birds appear in the marshes about harvest time." The Danish name is regen-spaer, because it speirs or foretells wet weather by its cry ; for the same reason it is called in Germany, • Wind- or Wettervogel. The sstme beUef prevails in Derbyphire, according to Mr. RatcMfe (" Long Ago," i. 304), who writes as follows : "I Was out listening to the sounds of night birds, when a whistling (see below, 3) and a twittering overhead, something like the twittering of swallows, drew my attention. I inquired of a man who was passing the meaning of the (to me) unusual sound : ' Them's curlews, ' he said ; ' some folks calls 'em ourlues ; they're a-hoverin' about, and it falls to be that we'll hae some slushy weather when they hover soo low at nights '." The Egyptian Arabs give it the title of "Karrawan,'' and say that its cry forms these words, addressing the Deity, "Lak, lak, lak, la shariah kalak, fi '1 mulk" — i.e., "^ to thee, to thee, to thee belongs the sovereignty of the world, without partner or comparison.' (St. John's " Village Life in Egypt," i. 344.) 3. Folk lore of the curlew. The sad wailing, cry of these birds, while on the wing, in the dark still nights of winter, resembling the moans of wandering spirits, is believed in PEOVINOIA.L NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 201 some parts of England to be a death warning, and called the cry of the Seven Whistlers. "I never thinks any good of them," said old Smith; "there's always an accident when they comes. They come over our heads all of a sudden, singing ' ewe, ewe,' an,d the men in the boat wanted to go back. It came on to rain and blow soon afterwards, and was an awful night, sir ; and sure enough before morning, a boat was upset, and seven poor fellows drowned. I know what makes the noise, sir ; it's them long-billed curlews, but I never Ukes to hear them." (Buckland's " Curiosities of Natural History," series ii., 286,287.) Sometimes the cry is exactly like the yelping of a pack of hounds, and hence has engendered the behef in a ghostly huntsman attended by his dogs, who traverse the air during the night, bringing death .and ruin to those who gee them, and to the house over which they halt. They are called in Devon- shire " Wish," or " Wisht hounds " ; in the neighbourhood of Sheffield, " Gabriel hounds." (See under Redwing, Wild Goose, Golden Plover.) Much interesting matter respecting the " furious hosts " will be found in Grimm's "Deutsche Mythologie," iii., 918-50, Eng.ed. It is to this that Bishop Mant refers in the lines " Shouting loud To warn their comrades of the way. Lest darlding from the line they, stray, , Wake the duU night with startling sounds ; Well might you deem the deep-mouthed hounds Raised in full cry the huntsman's peal. Or clamoured for their morning meal." The Scotch name whaup or whaap, mentioned above, has been bestowed in Ayrshire on a goblin or evil spirit, who, according to Jamieson (mb " Quhaip ") is supposed " to go about under the eaves of houses after the fall of . night, having a long beak resembling a pair of tongs for the purpose of carrying off evil-doers. This is referred to by Sir Walter Scott in the " Black Dwarf," chap, ii., where Hobbie Elliott says to Earnscliff, " What needs I care for the Muoklestane Moor ony mair than ye do yoursel, Earnscliff ? To be sure they say there's a sort of worricows and langnebbit things about the land, but what need I care for them ? " 4. Proverbial sayings. Curlews are extremely shy, and so easily alarmed that it is difficult to get within shot. Hence the Scotch saying that "to kill seven: curlews, or whaups, is enough for a lifetime." The flesh of the curlew is considered to be excellent eating — " lautissima," as Gesner says. Perhaps this epithet is rather too strong, but the bird always brings the price put on it by the old sayings "Be she white or be she. black. The curlew has tenpence on her back '' (Lincolnshire). Another version of iwhich is " A curlew leam or a curlew fat Carries twelvepence on her back." 202 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Order Gavi^. family LariDjE. ■Suh-famhily Stbrnin^. Genus Stekna. AUCTIC TEKSi [Sterna macrura). Danish Terne ; Swedish Tama. Tarrock (Shetland Isles). SparKng (Lancashire). A name given also to the Little Tern (Sterna'minuta). Jourongs (Gal way). " Signifying a cross and peevish disposition. So named from their hahit of picking and biting themselves when vfounded and thrown on the bottom of the boat" (^Watters). Skirr (Ireland). From its ery. Sea swslllow (Ireland). A name also givenmore generally to the common tern (which see). COMMON TERN [Sterna flvmatilis). 1. Akin to Danish Terne, Swedish Tarna, are the names Darr (Norfolk). Starn (Do.). Tarnie. Pictarnie, (East Lothian; Fife). Tarret ; Tarrock; Taring (Shetland Isles). Kccatarrie (Shetland Isles). Speikintares (Ross-shire). 2. The cry of the bird resembles the sound of the word ",pirre," hence Pirre, or Spurre (North of Ireland). Skirr (Lambay Island). Great purl (Norfolk). Kirrmew. Scraye., Of . -Pfowwg ; /"wwre (Picardy). Sparling, or Spurling (Lancashire). Dippiirl I (Norfolk). PKOYINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIEDS. 203 3. From the taU being elongated and forked like that of the swallow, and from its similar action on the wing, it has received the names Sea swallow (General). Shear tail (Orkney Isles). Cf . Hirondelle de mer (France) ; Golondrina de mar (Spain). 4. Also called Gull teaser (South Devon). Because it pursues the lesser gulls till they disgorge their prey, which it seizes before reaching the water. Picket-a (Orkney Isles). Rixy (Ea^t Suffolk). Miret (Cornwall). Clett. Kip. Great tern. Rittook, or Eippock (Orkney Isles). From Icel. rit-ur. Kingfisher (Lough Neagh). From its darting flight. Willie fisher (Forfar), Pease crow. " Called in Norway Mackerel tern, because it follows the shoals of mackerel in pursuit of the small fishes and marine insects which make for the surface of the water as the mackerel pass under them." (Bowden.) 5. In Ireland the bird's appearance is regarded as the harbinger of a good fishing season. EOSEATE TERN (Sterna dougatti). Purre maw (Carrickfergus). From their hoarae cry. LITTLE TEBX {Sterna mvnuta). 1. From the bird's cry are derived the names Skirr (Ireland). Small purl (Norfolk). Sparling (West Lancashire). Where the eggs and young are called " sea mice." 2. Also called Eichel bird. Little darr (Norfolk). 204 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Shrimp catcher (Norfolk). Fairy bird (Galway). From its graceful movements. Sea swallow (General). Dip ears (Norfolk). Little pickie (Forfar). Hooded tern. From the black crown, amd nape. SANDWICH tern: (Sterna cantiaca).. In the Farn Islands this species is called " the tern " par excdhnce, all other kinds having the name " sea swallows." (Selby.) Genus Hydrochblidon. BLACK TERN {Hydrochelidon nigra). Also called Stern. Scare crow. From its colour. Blue darr (Norfolk). " A corruption," says Mr. Johns,- " of dorr-hawk, a name for the nightjar, which it resembles in its mode of flight and also in its food, feeding on beetles and other insects." (But see under Common Tern, 1.) Car swallow (Cambridgeshire). From its being found on marshes — "carrs." Clover-footed gull. Sub-family Larin^. GULLS. 1. The name of gull appears to have been given to this family of birds from their wailing cry. (Corn. Gullan , "Welsh, Owylan ; Breton, G-welan ; Italian, Golano ; French, Goeland). Gull, as PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 205 applied to a dupe or a fool, means properly an unfledged bird. See " Halliwell's Dictionary," sub voc, who quotes Wilbraham to the effect that all nestling birds in quite an unfledged state are so called in Cheshire. 2. Weather prognostics from gulls. In Scotland and Ukter there is a common rhyme — " Sea gull, sea gull, sit on the sand, It's never good weather while you're on the land " : alluding to the fact that when gulls fly out early and far to seaward, or remain on the shore, fair weather maybe expected; but, if they appear inland, storms generally follow. Sir Walter Scott, in the following lines (" Lay of the Last Minstrel," cant, vi.), refers to the approach of the storm being known to these birds : — " Moor, moor the barge, ye gallant crew ! And, gentle ladye, deign to stay ! Rest thee in Castle Ravensheuch, Nor tempt the stormy frith 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." 3. Folk lore. The following curious narration is taken from Plot's "Natural History of Staffordshire," p. 231 (Oxford, 1686) : — " The strangest web-footed water fowle that frequents this county is the Larus cinereus Omithologi, the Lwrui cinereus tertius Mdrovandi, and the Cepphas of Gesner and Turner — in some counties called the Black cap ; in others, the Sea or Mire crow ; here the Pewit, which, being of the migratory kind, came annually to certain poolea in the estate of the Right Worshipful Sir Charles Skrymsher, Knight, to build and breed, and to no other estate in, or neer, the county^ but of this family to which they have belonged vUra hominum memoriam, and never moved from it, though they have changed their station often. They anciently came to the old pewit-poole above mentioned, about half a mile south-west of Norbury Church, but it being their strange quality (as the whole family will tell you, to whom I refer the reader for the following relation) to be disturbed and remove upon the death of the head of it, as they did within memory, upon the death of James Skrymsher, Esq., to Offley Moss, near Wood's Eyes, which Moss, though containing two gentlemen's lands, yet (which is very remarkable) the pewits did discern betwixt the one and the other, and build only on the land of the next heir, John Skrymsher, Esq., so wholly were they addicted to this family. At which Moss they continued about three years, and then removed to the old pewit-poole, again, where they continued to the death of the said John Skrymsher, Esq., which happening on the eve to our Lady Day, the very time when they are laying their eggs, yet so concerned were they at this gentleman's death, that notwithstanding this tie of the law of nature, which has ever been held to be universal and perpetual, they left their nests and eggs ; and though they made some attempts of laying again at Offley Moss, yet they were still so disturbed that they bred not all that year. The next year after they went to Aqualat, to another gentleman's estate of the same family, where (though tempted to stay with all the care imaginable), yet continued there but two years, and then returned again to another poole of the next heir of John Skrymsher, deceased, 206 PEOVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. called Shebben-poole, in the parish of High Offley, where they continue to this day, and seem to be the propriety, as I may say (though a wild fowls), of the Eight Worshipful Sir Charles Skrymsher, Knight, their present lord and master." ( Vid. aitp., sub Rook, pp. 87, 88.) Genus RissA. KITTIWAZE {Rissa tridaMyla).. 1. So called from its cry, three notes uttered in quick succession ; whence also Kittie (East coast; Banflf). " Seeing some kitties flying about some swimming willocks " (see under Guillemot), " one evening, I was assured that the willock, after diving and coming up with a fish, presented it to the kitty, who flew down to receive it." (" East Anglian," iii. 362.) Sea kittie (Norfolk ; Suffolk). Kishiefaik (Orkney Isles). Killyweeack (Do.). Keltie (Aberdeen). Waeg (Shetland Isleg). Diminutive of (Kitti)wake. 2. Various names. Cackareen. Petrel (Flamborough Head). Craa maa (Shetland Isles). Annet. Tarrock. A name applied to the young before their first moult. Genus Larus. GLAUCOUS GULL {Larus glaucus). So called from the white-frosted appearance of its feathers. By the Dutch sailors, so Scoresby tells us, the name of Burgomaster is given to this bird, either from its grave and majestic appear- ance, or because it is master of other sea fowl. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 207 Also called Golden maw (Stirling). Iceland scorie (Shetland Isles). A name only appKed to the young gulls while speckled; they lose the Bpeokled appearance after the first year. In Shetland the name " acorie " or " scaurie " is given to the young of any kind of gull. HERRING GTTLL (Larus a/rgentatus). Various names. Silvery, i.e. Silvery-white, gull (Ireland). Laughing gull (Belfast). White maa (Shetland Isles). Willie gow (East Lothian ; Aberdeen). Cat gull (Kirkcudbright). " These birds are detested by the keepers, and have probably earned their name and character by their oat-like depredations amongst the newly-hatehed young birds and eggs on the moors " (R. Service, in " Zoologist," 1878, p. 428). Mr. Harvie Brown suggests that the name is given from their cat-like voice. LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL {La/rus fuscus). Gray gull. Said fool (Shetland Isles). COMMON GULL {Larus camus). 1. Prom A.-S. Maew , akin to Dutch Meeuw; Icel. J/ifr (from the cry of the bird) are derived Mew, or Sea mew (Scotland). Maa, or Mar (Kirkcudbright). Sea maw, or Sea maU (Scotland). Small maa (Shetland Isles). Sea mell (obsolete). See under Bar-tailed Godwit, p. 198. Blue maa (Shetland Isles). From the bluish-ash of upper parts. Winter mew. 2. Various names. Gow — i.q. Gull (Aberdeen). Cobb or Sea cobb (Kent ; Essex; Suffolk; Norfolk). 208 PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. Annet (Northumberland). Winter bonnet. Coddy moddy. Barley bird (Soiitb Devon). From the time of its appearance, at barley sowing. Seed bird (Roxburgh ; Teviotdale). From its habit of following the plough. Green-billed gull. GREATER BLACK-BACKED GULL {Larus marinus). 1. From its black back are derived the names Black back. Black-and-white gull. Swart back (Orkney Isles). Swarbie (Shetland Isles). Saddleback (Norfolk ; Lancashire). Greater saddleback (Ireland). Parson gull, or mew (Sussex ; Galway). From the contraat of the blank back with the snow white of the unde plumage. 2. Also called Cobb (Essex ; Kent ; North Devon ; Wales ; Galway), With reference to its large size. Baagie (Shetland Isles). Goose gull (Ireland). Gray gull (Do.). GuU maw — i.e. mew (East Lothian). Carrion gull (Ireland). Being particularly addicted to flesh. Wagell gull. A name applied to the young birds. BLACK-HEADED GULL {Larus rudibundus). 1. In summer, the head and upper part of the neck are a deep dark brown, hence the names Black-headed gull. Black cap, or Black head. PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 209 Brown-headed gull. Hooded crow, or Hooded mew (Orkney Isles ; East Lothian). 2. From the bright vermilion of its feet and legs it is called Eed-shank gull (Ireland). Eed-legged gull (Do.). Red-legged pigeon mew (Norfolk). Cf. Pijoun de' mar (South of France). 3. Its habit of going inland, and frequenting fields to feed on worms and larvae in the newly-turned-up furrows, has caused the titles to be given to it of Puit, or Peewit gull (Norfolk ; Staffordshire). Sea crow. Mire crow. 4. Locacl names. Scoulton pie^ or Scoulton peewit (Norfolk). Scoulton Mere, in Norfolk, is a faTourite breeding-place of these birds. Potterton hen (Aberdeen). From a loch of that name, now dried up. (J. Harvie Brown.) Collochan gull, (Kirkcudbright). From a loch, so called. (R. Service, in " Zoologist,',' 1878, p. 428.) 5. Various names. Crocker. Bakie (Shetland Isles). Pine, or Pine maw (Antrim)j Maddriok gull (Cornwall). Sea maw, or Maw (Scotland). Pick sea ; Pictarn ; Pickmire (Roxburgh). Pickie bumet (Roxburgh). A name for the young gulls, whose head is- light brown, while the upper plumage is a darker shade of the same colour. Burnet =Fr. Brunette. 6. The fishermen about Finisterre say that if you hear the gulls cry " Car6 — car6 — care," it is time to wind up {ca/retter) the lines, for you will have no sport. 14 210 PKOVINCIAL NAMES OF BEITISH BIKDS. Suh-family STERGOEARiiNiB. Qenus Stercoeabius. COMMON SKUA {Stercor(wius catarrhactea). The skuas are so called from their sharp, shrill ciy, which resembles the word skua or skui. Various names. Bonxie (Shetland Isles). Herdsman (Orkney Isles). Because it is believed to protect the young lambs from the attacks of the eagle. Scull. Bla,ck gull (Tralee Bay). Black-toed gull. Port Egmont hen. A name given to this bird by sailors, from its being found in large flocks iu ithe Falkland Isles. Tom Hurry (Cornwall). Tuliac. Sea crow. Brown gull. JBadock. RICHARDSOU'S SKUA {Steraorarim crepidatus). 1. Grulls, both large and sinall, when engaged in fishing, are ■pursued and harassed by these birds till they disgorge their prey. The skuas then catch what is dropped before it reaches the water. Hence the name Teaser. 2. The following names are derived from the vulgar opinion that the gulls are muting, when, in reality, they are only disgorging ;fish newly caught. Dirt bird (Dundrum Bay). Skait bird (Old Scotch, from Skit-a-cacare). S — e scouter, i.e. skeiter. Scouty allan, or Scouty aulin (Orkney Isles). Weese allan (Do.). " Weese," from A.-S. was=moisture. Dirty allan, or aulin (East Scotland). Dung bird, or Dung hunter. Cf . Chasse merde (France) ; Struntjager (Germany). PROVINCIAL NAMES OF BRITISH BIRDS. 211 3. Various names. Arctic gull. Man-of-war bird. Black- toed gull (Moray). Boatswain (North Scotland ; Shetland Isles). Shooi— i.y. Skua; from the bird's ciy (Shetland Isles). Trumpie (Orkney Isles). Order Tubinaees. Family Pbocbllariid^. Genus Procellaria. STORM-PETaEL {Procellao'ia pdagica). The Petrel is so named from the French pitrel, a diminutive of Pitre. i.i. Peter ; and the allusion is to the Apostle walking on the Sea of Galilee. Whilst skimming along the waves its legs hang down, and the feet seem tO' touch the water, presenting the appearance of walking. 1. From the belief that its appearance prognosticates stormy weather, it is held in abhorrence by sailors ; hence the names Stormy petrel. Storm finch (Orkney Isles). Witch, or Waterwitch. Assilag (Hebrides). Prom Gaelic eiasch - 193 — Tit - - 26 Pioket-a - - 203 236 INDEX OF COMMON AND PROVINCIAL NAMES. PAQE FAG3 Piokie bumet - 209 Post bird 48 Pickmire - 209 Potterton hen - - 209 Pioktamie or Picket 202, 209 Povey 126 Piotarn 209 Praheen cark - 86 Pioksea - 209 Pretty, pretty creature - 70 Pie finch 62 Prine - - . . - 198 — Mag 76 Prinpriddle 32, 33, 34 — Nanny 76 Proud tailor - 58 - Sea - 188" Ptarmigan 174 — finch - 72 Puck or Puckeridge - - 97 Pied Fly-catcher 49 Pudding poke - - 32 — Wagtail - 43 Puffin - 217, 219 — Wigeon - 158, 160, 163 Puffinet - 218 Pienet 75, 188 Puit 184, 209 Piet, Water 30 Pump borer - 99 Piewipe - 184 Purl, Great - 202 Pigeon, Rock 168 — Little 203 — Wood - - 166 Purple Sajidpiper - 194 — felt 5 Purre 193, 202 — hawk - 136 — maw '203 — mow, Red-legged - 209 Puttock - - - 132 , 133, 137 Pigmy Curlew - 194 Pinchem - 34 Quail 173 Pine or Pine Maw 209 QuaketaU - 43 Pink, Pinkety, Pinktwink 62 Queest, Quest or Quist - - 165 Pinnock 29 Queet - 179 Pintail duck - 155 Quet 218 Pipe 220 Quice or Quease - 165 Pipit or Pipit lark 46 Quick me dick - 173 — Meadow - 46 Quinok - - 149 — Rock, or Shore ■ 46 Quia .... - 189 — Tree 46 Pirenet - 154 Rafter bird - 48 Pit Martin 56 Ragamuffin 31 Plover, Dotterel or Ringed - RaU, Land 177 — Golden, WhistUng or 182 — Water - 176 Yellow, - 180 Rain bird - - 100 — Great, Norfolk, or Stone 179 — fowl - - - - - 100 — Green, or Lapwing - 183 — pie ... - 100 — Grey 180, 181 — goose 213, 214 — Hill - - 180 Ralph 88 — Ringed 182 Rantock 164 Plover's Page 193 Ratch - 219 Plum-bird, or -budder 67 Rat goose - 149 Pochard - 160 Rattle-wings - 161 Poke-bag, or -pudding 32 Raven - 88 Poker - - 160 Razor bill - 217 — Waah-dish - 44 — grinder - - 97 Pool snipe - 197 Red-backed Shrike - 47 Poor Willie 198 Redbreast or Robin - 13 — Wren 175 Red-breasted Merganser - 164 Pop - ■ 5 — — linnet - - 64 Pope - - - 47, 66, 220 — cap - - 57 Popinjay - 100 Reddock - - 13 Popping wigeon 161, 164 Red-eyed poker 160 Port Egmont hen 210 Red-game or -Grouse 175 IN'DEX OF COMMON AND PEOVINCIAL NAMES. 237 PAGE PAGE Red Gddwit - 199 Robin Ruck - - 13 — Hawk - 140 Rock Blackbird 8 — -headed linnet - 65 — Dove or Doo 168, 218 — — finch - - 65 Rocker or Rockier - 168 — — Pochard 160 Rock Grouse 174 ' — — Smew or Curre 165 — Hawk - 139 — — Wigeon 160 — Lark or Pipit - 46 — hoop 66 — Lintie 46,66 Red-legged Crow 74 — Ouzel 8 — — Gull 209 — Pigeon - - 168 — — Horseman - 197 — Plover 181 — — Pigeon Mew - 209 — Starling 8 — — Snipe - 197 Rockie - - - - 66 — legs - 194, 197 Rodge - - 157 — linnet 64,65 Road or Rood Goose 149 — Owl - 129 Rook . - - - 86 Redpole - 64 Roseate Tern 203 Red Ptarmigan 175 Rose Linnet 64,65 — Sandpiper - 194 Rotch - 219 — shank 6, 197 Eott Goose - 149 — . — GuU - 209 Rothermuck or Routherock - 149 Redstart - - 12 Round berry bird - 8 Red tail 12 Rowdow - - 60 — -throated Diver- 214 Royston Crow or Royston Dick 85 — Thrush ■ 4 Ruddock - 13 Redwing or Redwing mavis 4 Ruddy Plover - 195 Reed bird - 27 Ruff 195 — Bunting 31 — Pheasant - 31 Saddleback 208 — Sparrow - 71 — Greater - - 208 — Warbler or Wren - 27 Said fool - - 207 Reefouge - 29 Saint Cuthbert's Duck 162 Reeve - 195 — George's Duck - 154 Richardson's Skua - - 211 Saker 139 Richel-bird - 203 Sally - 35 Rind tabberer - 99 — picker 25, 26, 28 Ring-bird - 71 Sand baokie - 57 — Blackbird 8 — cock 197 — Bunting . - - - 71 Sanderling - 195 — Dove 165 Sand Lark 182 , 195, 196 — fowl 71 — Martin 66 Ringed Dotterel or Plover 182 — Mouse 194 Ringlestone - - - - 182 Sandpiper - 196 Ring-necked Diver or Loon 213 — Ash-coloured - - 195 — Ouzel 8 — Black, Purple or Ringtail - — -tailed Eagle - 132 133 Rock - Sandsnipe 194 196 — Thrush - 8 Sand Swallow - - 56 Rippook - Bising Lark - River pie Bixy Roarer - 203 Sandwich Tern 204 92 Sand Wigeon - - 157 - 30 Sandy - - 196 203 — Laverock 182, 196 - 125 — Loo - 182 Roberd - - - - 63 Satin Grebe - - 215 Robin _ - - - ■ 13 Sawbill 163, 164 — Redbreast 13,35 — Wigeon 164 238 INDEX OF COMMON AND PROVINCIAL NAMES. Pi.GB PAGB Sawneb - . . 163. 164 Sea Snipe ... 19? ,195 Saw sharpener . . - - ' 33 — Swallow - 202 ,203 , 204 — whetter - . . - 33 — Titling - 46 Scald crow . . - 86 — Turtle dove 218 Scale-drake or -duck _ 153, 164 — Woodcock - 198 Scammel . 198 SeaguU Hawk - - - 132 Soar Crow - . 204 Sedge bird 27 Scarf or Soart - . . 142 — Wren - 27 Scaup duck . 159 — Marine 28 Scisaor grinder - 97. Seed bird - 208 Sclavonian Grebe 21^ — Lady 44 Scobby . 63 Segge 29 Scolder - . - 188 Seveu-coloured linnet 57 Scooper - . . 189 Shad bird 196 Soorie or Scaurie - . - 207 Shag - 143 Scotch nightingale 28 Shake - 197 Scoter, Common - - - 162 Sharp saw 33 — Velvet or Black . 163 — -tailed duck - 161 Scoulton pie - . . 209 Sheartail - 203 Scout - 217 218, 220 Shearwater, Greater 212 Scouty Allan or AuUn 210 — Manx - - 212 Scrabe . - 212 Sheelfa or ShilEa 62 Scraber . . 212, 218 Sheely - 62 Scraye - ■ - 202 Sheeprack 73 Screamer, Soreecher - 95 Sheldapple . 62 Screech - . 1 Sheldrake 163 158 — -bird, or -thrush . 6 Sheldfowl . 153 — hawk - . . - 97 Shellduck 153 163 — Martin - - - 95 Shepster, or Shepstarling - 73 — Owl - 123 125, 129 Sheriffs man - 57 Scremerston crow . . - 86 Shooi . 211 Scribbling lark ■ . - 70 Shore bird 57 Scull ■ - 210 — Pipit - 46 Scuttock or Skiddaw - 218 — Snipe . 196 Scutty - - 35 — Teetan . 46 Sea Cock- - - 181 Short-eared or -horned Owl . 129 — Crow- - 74, 142, 209 210, 217 Short-heeled Field lark 46 — Dotterel 182, 187 — lark . 92 — Dovie . - 218 Shovel-bill - 158 — Duck- . . - 163 Shoveler, Shovelard 158 — Eagle ■ . - 136 Shred cock . 6 — IJawk - 141 Shrieker - 198 199 — Hen - - - 218 Shriek owl . 95 — Kittle - - - 206 Shrike, Great Grey - 47 — Lark - - 46, 182, 187, 193, 195 — Eed-backed 47 — Lintie' ' - - ■ 46 Shrimp catcher 204 — Mall, Mew or Mow . 207, 209 Shrite - . 1 — Mice - ■ 203 Shuffle wing - 29 — Mouse - 194 Silver Grebe . 214 — Parrot - - - 219 — Owl - . 125 — Peek - ■ - - 194 — Plover - 195 — Pheasant ■ - - 155 Silvery Gull . 207 — Piet or Pie - 188 Siskin . 59 — Pigeon - 168, 218 Sit ye dovra - . 32 — Pilot - - ■ 188 Skait bird . 210 — Plover - - - 181 Skart - - 143 INDEX OF COMMON AND PEOVINCIAL NAMES. 239 Skeel duck — goose ... Skeer devil Skel drake or Skiel drake Skiddy cock, Skiddy or Skit Skirloock Skirlcrake Skirr Skite Skitter broljtie Skittery deacon Skitty - 176, : — spotted - Skitty -coot, or -cock Skrite Skua, Common — Eichardson's - Sky lark or Sky laverock - Slab Sly Goose Small Curlew ■ — Blue hawk — Doucker — Maw — Purl — Straw Smee duck 154, '. Smeu, Smooth, Smieuth Smew Smyth - Snabby Snake bird Snapper ■ Snipe, Common or Whole — Great or Double - — Jack or Half - — Solitary — Summer 193, — Woodcock Snipe-hawk Snippaok Snite . . - . Snorter . - - - Snow bird — Bunting - — fowl — Flake or Fleck Snuff-headed Wigeon Sod .... Solan Goose - Solitary Snipe - — Thrush Song Thrush - . - Spadger . - - Sparlin fowl - Sparling, or Spurling PACtB PAGE - 153 Sparrow - 60, 69 - 153 — Hedge - 28 - 95 — House 60 153; 188 — Reed - - 71 176 Sparve - - 29 1 Spar or Spur Hawk - - 136 187 Sparrow Hawk - 136, 140 202, 203 — spear . - 72 70 Spear Wigeon - 164 - 69 Speckled Dick - - 57 - 196 — Diver - 214 177, 178 — Loon 214 - 177 Spectacled Goose - 144 - 176 Speikintares 202 1 Spency - 211 210 Spider-diver - - 216 211 Spink - - 62 - 92 Spinner - - 97 - 103 Spoonbill, Spoonbeak - 158, 159 - 154 Spotted Crake - - - 17/ 199 — Guillemot - 219 139 — Rail . - - 177 - 216 — Skitty - - 177 - 207 — Water Hen - - 177 - 203 Spowe - 200 - 24 Sprat borer, Spratoon - 214 160, 164 Spratter . - 217 - 27 Sprat Loon - 214 - 164 Sprig, Sprug, Spug - 60 178 Spring Wagtail - 45 63 Sprite ... 99 103 Spurdie 60 - 100 Spurre - 202 - 191 Spyng - 60 191 Squawking Thrush - 1 193 Squealer - 95 - 191 Stag - 35 196, 197 Standgale, Stannel, Stanchel, 191 Stand Hawk or Stannel Hawk 140 131 Stane chacker - 9,11 - 192 — chapper - - 12 - 192 — pecker - - 187, 194 9 Stankhen, Stankie 178 -6,72 Starling, Stare- - 73 72 Starenil, StaynU - 73 - 72 Starn - 202 - 72 Steenie pouter - 196 160 Steinkle 9 168 Stem - 204 144 Stint 193. 195 - 191 Stock Annet -'154 ■ 73 — duck - 154, 156 3 — dove - - 167 - 60 — eikle - 99 - 164 — hawk ■ 139 202, 203 — owl - 130 240 INDEX OF COMMON AND PROVINCIAL NAMES. PAGE Stock whaup - - - - 200 Stone-chat, -chaoker or -clink 9,11,34 — clocharet - 11 — curlew - - 199 — falcon - - - 139 — gall ... 140 — hatch - - 182 — hawk - - - 139 — plover 179, 181, 182, 198 — raw - - - 187 — ■ runner - 182, 183 — smlch - 12 — thrush - 2 Storm-bird 6 — -cock 2, 6, 100 Storm-petrel or -finch 211 Strand Tlover - 181 Straney - 218 Strawsmall 23 Strawsmeer 23, 24, 26 Stubble gooBe - - 147 Summer bird - 103 — duck - - 158 — Snipe 193 , 196, 197 — Teal - 158 — Wagtail - ■ 45 Surf duck or Surf scoter - - 163 Swallow - -49, 56, 211 — Sea - - 203 — -tailed Sheldrake 161 Swan, TVhooper, Wild or AVhist- ling - ■ 150 Swan, Mute - - 150 Swarbie - - - 208 Swart back - - - - 208 Sweet WUliam or Sweet BUly 27, 57 Swift 95 Swine-pipe - - 5 Swing-devil ... 95 Swiss Sandpiper ... 182 Sycook - - - 2 Tael duck Tanmiie - — herl " — norie ■ Tang Sparrow • — Whaup ■ Tangle picker - 158 219 145 219 46 199 187 Tapper, Tapperer or Tabberer - 99 Tarrock, Taring 202 Tamie - - - - 202 Tarrock - - 202, 206, 218 Tatler - - - - 196 Tawny - - - - 67 — Bunting - - 72 Tawny Owl, or Tawny Hooting Owl - - - 129 Teal .... 158 — Cricket or Summer - 158 Teaser . - - 210 Teetan ... 45, 46 Teeuck or Tietick - 45, 46, 184 Teewit - ... 184 Tercel ... - 139 — gentle - - 139 Tern, Arctic - 202 — Black - 204 — Common - 202 — Great - - 203 — Lesser or Little - 203 — Eoseate ... 203 Tern, Sandwich - 204 Teuchit - - 184 Teufit - - 184 Teuk - - - 197 Thack or Thatch Sparrow - 60 Thiok-bOl - 67 knee - 179 Thirstle or Thirstle cook - - 3 Thistle cock - 69 — finch - - . . 57 Thrice cook - - - 2 Throstle or Throstle cock - 2, 3 Thrusfield - - 3 Thrush, Holm or Missel 1 — Ring . 8 — Solitary . 73 — Song - - 3 Thrusher ... 3 Thrustle - - 3 ■ Thumb-bird - 25 Thummie - - 26 Tick . - - . 11 Tidife - - 34 Tidley ... - 35 — Goldfinch . 25 Tiercel .... 139 Tieves geit, or Tieves nicket - 184 Tinkershere or Tinker's hue - 218 Tinnock - - 34 Tintie - - - - 35 Tippet Grebe . - , 215 Tirma - . . - 188 Tit or Titmouse, Bearded 30 — — Blue - - 33 — — Cole 33 — — Great - 32 — — Long- tailed . 31 — — Marsh - 33 Titlark or Titling - . 46,46 Titlene ' - - - - 89 INDEX OF COMMON AND PROVINCIAL NAMES. 241 Titmal .... Titt^el - Titty todger - Toad Bnatcher - ■ . Tom Harry — noup or nope - — pudding - . . — Thumb - Tomtit - - 33, 34, Tongue bird - Tony hoop or Tonnihood - Too zoo - - . - Tope .... Tor Ouzel . . . . Tortoise-shell Goose - - . Tot o'er seas Towilly - - - . Tree (>eeper, Climber or Clipper Tree Goose - . . . — Pipit or Lark - . . — Speeler - - Trillaohan - - - Trumpie Tuchit or Tuet Tufted Duck — Skart - Tuliao - ... Turkey bird .... Turnstone Tiui;le dove ... — Greenland — Sea ... Twite - — finch or -lark - - . Tyatie - - 33 199 35 - 72 ■ 210 33, 34 ■ 216 26 35,57 103 67 166 35 8 148 25 195 57 149 46 57 188 211 184 158 143 210 104 187 169 218 218 TJthage - Uthiok or Utick - 219 11 11 Van- winged Hawk - - 139 Vanner Hawk ... 140 Tare, or Vare headed Wigeon 160, 165 Velverd - - 5 Velvet Duck or Scoter - 163 — Runner- . 176 206 208 43 44 43 46 44 44 44 48 Wagell Gull Wagtail, Grey or Grey-headed — Pied — Spring or Summer — White — Winter — Tellow WaU bird or Wall plat - Warbler, Garden — Grasshopper — Reed - - 24 - 28 - 27 - 27 - 28 - 27 - 149 - 47 44 - 30 - 30 !0, 177 !0, 179 - 141 ■ 178 196 196 30 30 176 27,71 30 43 211 — WiUow — Wood Ware Goose Wariangle - - . Waahdish and Washerwoman Water Blackbird — Colly - — Crake - — Crow — Eagle . — Hen . — Junket - — Laverock — Ouzel or Piet — Peggie - — Rail - — Sparrow — Thrush - — Wagtail — Witch - Waterie, Wattie, or Wattle wag tail - . 43,46 Waterie Pleeps - 196, 197 WaxVping ... 43 Wease-aUan or -alley - 210 Weasel coot or duck 166 Weep - - . 184 Weet bird . . 103 — my feet . - - 173 — weet - . 196 Wekeen - - 45 Well plum . - . 160 Welsh ambassador - - 109 Wet bird . - - 63 Wet my lip - - 173 Whaup ..... 200 Whautie - - 23 Wheatear - - - - 9 Wheatsel bird - - - 63 Wheel bird or Wheeler - 96 Wheety why, Wheety Whey- beard, or Whey beard - - 23 W hewer or Whew duck - 154, 165 Whim - - - 154 Whimbrel - - 199 Whinchat ... n Whinchacker, Whincheck, or Whinolocharet - - 11 Whin grey • - - 65 — Linnet - - 11, 65 — Sparrow - 28 Whinyard 158, 160 16 242 INDEX OF COMMON AND PROVINCrAL NAMES, PAOI PAGE Whip - 96 Wigeon, Red-headed - 160 Whishie - 23 — Vare - 165 Whistler - - 9, 154 161 Wild Duck 156 Whistling Duck 179 , — Goose 147, 148 — Plover 180 181 — Pigeon 168 — Swan . 152 — Swan 152 — Thrush . 3 Willook or Willy 217, 220 White ahoon Gled - - 132 — Sparrow - 26 — ass 9 — Warbler - 26 — Baker 48 Willy fisher 26, 203 — Cap 13,22 — gow - 207 — -faced Diver - 178 ^- hawky 216 — — Duck - ■ 159 — muftie 26 — — ■ Barnacle . 149 — WagtaQ - 43 — — Goose - . 148 — wicket 196 — Finch - 62 Wind - - 183 White-fronted Goose 148 Windbibber, Windcuffer, Wind- — Game 174 fanner, Windhover, Wiad- — Grouse - 174 sucker - - 140 — Hawk - . 132 Windle, Windthrush, Winuard 5 — -headed Goosander - 165 Window Martin - 56 — — Harpy 132 — Swallow - 56 — Hoolet 125 Windle Straw or Winnel - - 23 — Kite - 132 Winter bonnet 208 — Lark - 72 — Duck - - 155 — Lintie - 22 — Gull or Mew 207 — Maw 207 — Wagtaa - 44 — Merganser 165 Witch >- Witchuok 211 — Nun - 165 - 57 — Owl 125 Wittol - 9 — Partridge . 174 WitwaU 100 — rump - 9 Woodchuck 100 — side 160 Woodcock - 189 — -sided Duck 169 — Owl - 129 — — Diver - 159 — Snipe 191 — taU - ■ 9 — Sea - - 198 — -tailed Eagle - - 136 Woodoracker - 35 — throat - 22,24 Wood Dove - 167 — WagtaU- ii — Grouse - - 176 — waU - 48 — hack 100 — Wigeon - 165 Woodlark 93 — wing - 62 Woodknacker - - - - 99 — wisky John 47 Wood oven - 26 — Wren - 26 Wood Owl 129 Whitile - - . . 99 Woodpecker - 67 Whitterick 200 — Barred - -• 98 Whitty beard - 23 — Brown - - 57 WhitwaU - 100 — Great spotted or pied 98 Whole Snipe - - 192 — Green - 99 Whooper Swan 152 — Lesser spotted ' 98 Wierangel 47 Woodpie - 98,99 Wigeon - . . . - 152 Wood Pigeon - 166 — Black - 155 ,159 — Quest - 165 — diver 160 — spaok, Woodspite, Wood- — Freshwater - 160 sucker, Woodwall, — Pied - - 158 Woodtapper 98, 99, 100 INDEX OF COMMON AND PKOVINCIAl NAMES. 243 Wood Thruah - 2 — Titmouse 25 — Warbler - 27 Woofell 6 Woolert 126 Wranny or Wrannock 35 Wren - 35 — Golden-crested ■ - 25 — Reed 27 — Willow - 26 — Wood - 27 Writhe neck - 103 Writing Lark, or WritingMaster 70 Wryneck - 103 Wype - - - - 184 Yaffle, Yaffil, Yaffler, Yappingale 100 TAOB Yardkeep or Yarwhip 198 Yarwhelp . - 198 Yaup ... 34 Yeldrin and Yeldrock 69 Yellow Ammer - - 69 — Bunting - . 69 — Molly - 44 — Owl - . 125 — PloTer. - . - 180 — Poll . . - 44, 154 — Wagtail or Waggie . 44 — Wren ... 26, 27 — Yeldock, Yoit, Yoldrin, Yowley - . 69 Yelper . . . 189 Young curlew - - 199 Yuokel or Yockel ... 99 Finis. Printed by Hazell, Wataon, & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury. qT|.|.|.i,|.|.|.|.l.|.|.|.|-l-l-FFT .|.|.|.|.|.|.|.|.|.|.|.|.|-l-l-"FFFr