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+ <title>The Project Gutenberg e-Book of A Bird Calendar for Northern India, by Douglas Dewar</title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's A Bird Calendar for Northern India, by Douglas Dewar
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Bird Calendar for Northern India
+
+Author: Douglas Dewar
+
+Release Date: April 23, 2006 [EBook #18237]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BIRD CALENDAR FOR NORTHERN INDIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ron Swanson
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<small><i>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</i><br>
+<br>
+ANIMALS OF NO IMPORTANCE<br>
+THE INDIAN CROW: HIS BOOK<br>
+BOMBAY DUCKS<br>
+BIRDS OF THE PLAINS<br>
+INDIAN BIRDS<br>
+JUNGLE FOLK<br>
+GLIMPSES OF INDIAN BIRDS<br>
+BIRDS OF THE INDIAN HILLS<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<i>IN COLLABORATION WITH FRANK FINN</i><br>
+<br>
+THE MAKING OF SPECIES<br></small>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h1>A BIRD CALENDAR FOR NORTHERN INDIA</h1>
+
+<h2>BY DOUGLAS DEWAR</h2>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>LONDON: W. THACKER &amp; CO., CREED LANE, E.C.<br>
+CALCUTTA AND SIMLA: THACKER, SPINK &amp; CO.<br>
+1916</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center><small>WM. BRENDON AND SON, LTD., PRINTERS, PLYMOUTH, ENGLAND.</small></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>I am indebted to the editor of <i>The Pioneer</i> for permission to
+republish the sketches that form this calendar, and to Mr. A. J.
+Currie for placing at my disposal his unpublished notes on the
+birds of the Punjab.</p>
+
+<p>Full descriptions of all the Indian birds of which the doings
+are chronicled in this calendar are to be found in the four
+volumes of the <i>Fauna of British India</i> devoted to birds;
+popular descriptions of the majority are given in my <i>Indian
+Birds</i>.</p>
+
+<div align="right">D. D.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>
+
+<p>H<small>ARROW</small>,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>J<small>anuary 1916</small></i>.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+
+<a href="#january">J<small>ANUARY</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#february">F<small>EBRUARY</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#march">M<small>ARCH</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#april">A<small>PRIL</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#may">M<small>AY</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#june">J<small>UNE</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#july">J<small>ULY</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#august">A<small>UGUST</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#september">S<small>EPTEMBER</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#october">O<small>CTOBER</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#november">N<small>OVEMBER</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#december">D<small>ECEMBER</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#glossary">G<small>LOSSARY</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<a href="#index">I<small>NDEX</small></a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page1"></a>
+<h3><a name="january">JANUARY</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="january poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>Up&mdash;let us to the fields away,<br>
+ And breathe the fresh and balmy air.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ M<small>ARY</small> H<small>OWITT.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Take nine-and-twenty sunny, bracing English May days, steal from
+March as many still, starry nights, to these add two rainy
+mornings and evenings, and the product will resemble a typical
+Indian January. This is the coolest month in the year, a month
+when the climate is invigorating and the sunshine temperate. But
+even in January the sun's rays have sufficient power to cause
+the thermometer to register 70&deg; in the shade at noon,
+save on an occasional cloudy day.</p>
+
+<p>Sunset is marked by a sudden fall of temperature. The village
+smoke then hangs a few feet above the earth like a blue-grey
+diaphanous cloud.</p>
+
+<p>The cold increases throughout the hours of darkness. In the
+Punjab hoar-frosts form daily; and in the milder United
+Provinces <a name="page2"></a>the temperature often falls sufficiently to allow of
+the formation of thin sheets of ice. Towards dawn mists collect
+which are not dispersed until the sun has shone upon them for
+several hours. The vultures await the dissipation of these
+vapours before they ascend to the upper air, there to soar on
+outstretched wings and scan the earth for food.</p>
+
+<p>On New Year's Day the wheat, the barley, the gram, and the other
+Spring crops are well above the ground, and, ere January has
+given place to February, the emerald shoots of the corn attain a
+height of fully sixteen inches. On these the geese levy toll.</p>
+
+<p>Light showers usually fall in January. These are very welcome to
+the agriculturalist because they impart vigour to the young
+crops. In the seasons when the earth is not blessed with the
+refreshing winter rain men and oxen are kept busy irrigating the
+fields. The cutting and the pressing of the sugar-cane employ
+thousands of husbandmen and their cattle. In almost every
+village little sugar-cane presses are being worked by oxen from
+sunrise to sunset. At night-time the country-side is illumined
+by the flames of the <a href="#megas"><i>megas</i></a> burned by
+the rustic sugar-boilers.</p>
+<a name="page3"></a>
+<p>January is the month in which the avian population attains its
+maximum. Geese, ducks, teal, pelicans, cormorants, snake-birds
+and ospreys abound in the rivers and <a href="#jhil"><i>jhils</i></a>; the marshes and
+swamps are the resort of millions of snipe and other waders; the
+fields and groves swarm with flycatchers, chats, starlings,
+warblers, finches, birds of prey and the other migrants which in
+winter visit the plains from the Himalayas and the country
+beyond.</p>
+
+<p>The bracing climate of the Punjab attracts some cold-loving
+species for which the milder United Provinces have no charms.
+Conspicuous among these are rooks, ravens and jackdaws. On the
+other hand, frosts drive away from the Land of the Five Rivers
+certain of the feathered folk which do not leave the United
+Provinces or Bengal: to wit, the purple sunbird, the bee-eater
+and, to a large extent, the king-crow.</p>
+
+<p>The activity of the feathered folk is not at its height in
+January. Birds are warm-blooded creatures and they love not the
+cold. Comparatively few of them are in song, and still fewer
+nest, at this season.</p>
+
+<p>Song and sound are expressions of energy. <a name="page4"></a>Birds have more
+vitality, more life in them than has any other class of
+organism. They are, therefore, the most noisy of beings.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the calls of birds are purposeful, being used to express
+pleasure or anger, or to apprise members of a flock of one
+another's presence. Others appear to serve no useful end. These
+are simply the outpourings of superfluous energy, the
+expressions of the supreme happiness that perfect health
+engenders. Since the vigour of birds is greatest at the nesting
+season, it follows that that is the time when they are most
+vociferous. Some birds sing only at the breeding season, while
+others emit their cries at all times. Hence the avian choir in
+India, as in all other countries, is composed of two sets of
+vocalists&mdash;those who perform throughout the year, "the musicians
+of all times and places," and those who join the chorus only for
+a few weeks or months. The calls of the former class go far to
+create for India its characteristic atmosphere. To enumerate all
+such bird calls would be wearisome. For the purposes of this
+calendar it is necessary to describe only the common daily
+cries&mdash;the sounds that at all times and all seasons form the
+basis of the avian chorus.</p>
+<a name="page5"></a>
+<p>From early dawn till nightfall the welkin rings with the harsh
+caw of the house-crow, the deeper note of the black crow or
+corby, the tinkling music of the bulbuls, the cheery <i>keky</i>,
+<i>keky</i>, <i>kek</i>, <i>kek</i> ... <i>chur</i>, <i>chur</i>, <i>kok</i>, <i>kok</i>, <i>kok</i> of
+the myna, the monotonous <i>cuckoo-coo-coo</i> of the spotted dove
+(<i>Turtur suratensis</i>), the soft subdued <i>cuk-cuk-coo-coo-coo</i> of
+the little brown dove (<i>T. cambayensis</i>), the mechanical
+<i>ku-ku&mdash;ku</i> of the ring-dove (<i>T. risorius</i>), the loud penetrating
+shrieks of the green parrot, the trumpet-like calls of the saras
+crane, the high-pitched <i>did-he-do-it</i> of the red-wattled
+lapwing, the wailing trill <i>chee-hee-hee-hee</i> <i>hee&mdash;hee</i> of the
+kite, the hard grating notes and the metallic <i>coch-lee</i>,
+<i>coch-lee</i> of the tree-pie; the sharp <i>towee</i>, <i>towee</i>, <i>towee</i>
+of the tailor-bird, the soft melodious cheeping calls of the
+flocks of little white-eyes, the <i>chit</i>, <i>chit</i>, <i>chitter</i> of
+the sparrow, the screaming cries of the golden-backed
+woodpecker, the screams and the trills of the white-breasted
+kingfisher, the curious harsh clamour of the cuckoo-shrike, and,
+last but by no means least, the sweet and cheerful whistling
+refrain of the fan-tail flycatcher, which at frequent intervals
+emanates from a tree in the garden or the mango <a href="#tope">tope</a>. Nor is <a name="page6"></a>the
+bird choir altogether hushed during the hours of darkness.
+Throughout the year, more especially on moonlit nights, the
+shrieking <i>kucha</i>, <i>kwachee</i>, <i>kwachee</i>, <i>kwachee</i>, <i>kwachee</i> of
+the little spotted owlet disturbs the silences of the moon. Few
+nights pass on which the dusky horned owl fails to utter his
+grunting hoot, or the jungle owlet to emit his curious but not
+unpleasant <i>turtuck</i>, <i>turtuck</i>, <i>turtuck</i>, <i>turtuck</i>,
+<i>turtuck</i>, <i>tukatu</i>, <i>chatuckatuckatuck</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The above are the commonest of the bird calls heard throughout
+the year. They form the basis of the avian melody in India. This
+melody is reinforced from time to time by the songs of those
+birds that may be termed the seasonal choristers. It is the
+presence or absence of the voices of these latter which imparts
+distinctive features to the minstrelsy of every month of the
+year.</p>
+
+<p>In January the sprightly little metallic purple sunbird pours
+forth, from almost every tree or bush, his powerful song, which,
+were it a little less sharp, might easily be mistaken for that
+of a canary.</p>
+
+<p>From every mango tope emanates a loud "Think of me ... Never to
+be." This is the call of the grey-headed flycatcher (<i>Culicicapa
+<a name="page7"></a>ceylonensis</i>), a bird that visits the plains of northern India
+every winter. In summer it retires to the Himalayas for nesting
+purposes. Still more melodious is the call of the wood-shrike,
+which is frequently heard at this season, and indeed during the
+greater part of the year.</p>
+
+<p>Every now and again the green barbet emits his curious chuckling
+laugh, followed by a monotonous <i>kutur</i>, <i>kutur</i>, <i>kuturuk</i>. At
+rare intervals his cousin, the coppersmith, utters a soft <i>wow</i>
+and thereby reminds us that he is in the land of the living.
+These two species, more especially the latter, seem to dislike
+the cold weather. They revel in the heat; it is when the
+thermometer stands at something over 100&deg; in the shade
+that they feel like giants refreshed, and repeat their loud
+calls with wearying insistence throughout the hours of daylight.</p>
+
+<p>The nuthatches begin to tune up in January. They sing with more
+cheer than harmony, their love-song being a sharp penetrating
+<i>tee-tee-tee-tee-tee</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The hoopoe reminds us of his presence by an occasional soft
+<i>uk-uk-uk</i>. His breeding season, like that of the nuthatch, is
+about to begin.</p>
+<a name="page8"></a>
+<p>The magpie-robin or <i>dhayal</i>, who for months past has uttered no
+sound, save a scolding note when occasion demanded, now begins
+to make melody. His January song, however, is harsh and crude,
+and not such as to lead one to expect the rich deep-toned music
+that will compel admiration in April, May and June.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of the month the fluty call of the koel, another
+hot-weather chorister, may be heard in the eastern portions of
+northern India.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the cock sunbirds cast off their workaday plumage and
+assumed their splendid metallic purple wedding garment in
+November and December, a few, however, do not attain their full
+glory until January. By the end of the month it is difficult to
+find a cock that is not bravely attired from head to tail in
+iridescent purple.</p>
+
+<p>Comparatively few birds build their nests in January. Needless
+to state, doves' nests containing eggs may be found at this
+season as at all other seasons. It is no exaggeration to assert
+that some pairs of doves rear up seven or eight broods in the
+course of the year. The consequence is that, notwithstanding the
+fact that the full clutch consists of but two eggs, <a name="page9"></a>doves share
+with crows, mynas, sparrows and green parrots the distinction of
+being the most successful birds in India.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of the dove is a subject over which most ornithologists
+have waxed sarcastic. One writer compares the structure to a
+bundle of spillikins. Another says, "Upset a box of matches in a
+bush and you will have produced a very fair imitation of a
+dove's nursery!" According to a third, the best way to make an
+imitation dove's nest is to take four slender twigs, lay two of
+them on a branch and then place the remaining two crosswise on
+top of the first pair. For all this, the dove's nest is a
+wonderful structure; it is a lesson in how to make a little go a
+long way. Doves seem to place their nurseries haphazard on the
+first branch or ledge they come across after the spirit has
+moved them to build. The nest appears to be built solely on
+considerations of hygiene. Ample light and air are a <i>sine qua
+non</i>; concealment appears to be a matter of no importance.</p>
+
+<p>In India winter is the time of year at which the larger birds of
+prey, both diurnal and nocturnal, rear up their broods.
+Throughout January the white-backed vultures are <a name="page10"></a>occupied in
+parental duties. The breeding season of these birds begins in
+October or November and ends in February or March. The nest,
+which is placed high up in a lofty tree, is a large platform
+composed of twigs which the birds themselves break off from the
+growing tree. Much amusement may be derived from watching the
+struggles of a white-backed vulture when severing a tough
+branch. Its wing-flapping and its tugging cause a great
+commotion in the tree. The boughs used by vultures for their
+nests are mostly covered with green leaves. These last wither
+soon after the branch has been plucked, so that, after the first
+few days of its existence, the nest looks like a great ball of
+dead leaves caught in a tree.</p>
+
+<p>The nurseries of birds of prey can be described neither as
+picturesque nor as triumphs of architecture, but they have the
+great merit of being easy to see. January is the month in which
+to look for the eyries of Bonelli's eagles (<i>Hieraetus
+fasciatus</i>); not that the search is likely to be successful. The
+high cliffs of the Jumna and the Chambal in the Etawah district
+are the only places where the nests of this fine eagle have been
+recorded in the United Provinces. Mr. A. J. Currie has <a name="page11"></a>found the
+nest on two occasions in a mango tree in a tope at Lahore. In
+each case the eyrie was a flat platform of sticks about twice
+the size of a kite's nest. The ground beneath the eyrie was
+littered with fowls' feathers and pellets of skin, fur and bone.
+Most of these pellets contained squirrels' skulls; and Mr.
+Currie actually saw one of the parent birds fly to the nest with
+a squirrel in its talons.</p>
+
+<p>Bonelli's eagle, when sailing through the air, may be recognised
+by the long, hawk-like wings and tail, the pale body and dark
+brown wings. It soars in circles, beating its pinions only
+occasionally.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the tawny eagles (<i>Aquila vindhiana</i>) build
+their nests in December. By the middle of January many of the
+eggs have yielded nestlings which are covered with white down.
+In size and appearance the tawny eagle is not unlike a kite. The
+shape of the tail, however, enables the observer to distinguish
+between the two species at a glance. The tail of the kite is
+long and forked, while that of the eagle is short and rounded at
+the extremity. The Pallas's fishing-eagles (<i>Haliaetus
+leucoryphus</i>) are likewise busy feeding their young. These fine
+birds are readily identified by the <a name="page12"></a>broad white band in the
+tail. Their loud resonant but unmelodious calls make it possible
+to recognise them when they are too far off for the white tail
+band to be distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>This species is called a fishing-eagle; but it does not indulge
+much in the piscatorial art. It prefers to obtain its food by
+robbing ospreys, kites, marsh-harriers and other birds weaker
+than itself. So bold is it that it frequently swoops down and
+carries off a dead or wounded duck shot by the sportsman.
+Another raptorial bird of which the nest is likely to be found
+in January is the <i>Turumti</i> or red-headed merlin (<i>Aesalon
+chicquera</i>). The nesting season of this ferocious pigmy extends
+from January to May, reaching its height during March in the
+United Provinces and during April in the Punjab.</p>
+
+<p>As a general rule birds begin nesting operations in the Punjab
+from fifteen to thirty days later than in the United Provinces.
+Unless expressly stated the times mentioned in this calendar
+relate to the United Provinces. The nest of the red-headed
+merlin is a compact circular platform, about twelve inches in
+diameter, placed in a fork near the top of a tree.</p>
+<a name="page13"></a>
+<p>The attention of the observer is often drawn to the nests of
+this species, as also to those of other small birds of prey and
+of the kite, by the squabbles that occur between them and the
+crows. Both species of crow seem to take great delight in
+teasing raptorial birds. Sometimes two or three of the <i>corvi</i>
+act as if they had formed a league for the prevention of
+nest-building on the part of white-eyed buzzards, kites, shikras
+and other of the lesser birds of prey. The <i>modus operandi</i> of
+the league is for two or more of its members to hie themselves
+to the tree in which the victim is building its nest, take up
+positions near that structure and begin to caw derisively. This
+invariably provokes the owners of the nest to attack the black
+villains, who do not resist, but take to their wings. The angry,
+swearing builders follow in hot pursuit for a short distance and
+then fly back to the nest. After a few minutes the crows return.
+Then the performance is repeated; and so on, almost <i>ad
+infinitum</i>. The result is that many pairs of birds of prey take
+three weeks or longer to construct a nest which they could have
+completed within a week had they been unmolested.</p>
+<a name="page14"></a>
+<p>Most of the larger owls are now building nests or sitting on
+eggs; a few are seeking food for their offspring. As owls work
+on silent wing at night, they escape the attentions of the crows
+and the notice of the average human being. The nocturnal birds
+of prey of which nests are likely to be found in January are the
+brown fish-owl (<i>Ketupa ceylonensis</i>) and the rock and the dusky
+horned-owls (<i>Bubo bengalensis</i> and <i>B. coromandus</i>). The dusky
+horned-owl builds a stick nest in a tree, the rock horned-owl
+lays its eggs on the bare ground or on the ledge of a cliff,
+while the brown fish-owl makes a nest among the branches or in a
+hollow in the trunk of a tree or on the ledge of a cliff.</p>
+
+<p>In the Punjab the ravens, which in many respects ape the manners
+of birds of prey, are now nesting. A raven's nest is a compact
+collection of twigs. It is usually placed in an isolated tree of
+no great size.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian raven has not the austere habits of its English
+brother. It is fond of the society of its fellows. The range of
+this fine bird in the plains of India is confined to the
+North-West Frontier Province Sind, and the Punjab.</p>
+
+<p>An occasional pair of kites may be seen at work nest-building
+during the present month.</p>
+<a name="page15"></a>
+<p>Some of the sand-martins (<i>Cotyle sinensis</i>), likewise, are
+engaged in family duties. The river bank in which a colony of
+these birds is nesting is the scene of much animation. The bank
+is riddled with holes, each of which, being the entrance to a
+martin's nest, is visited a score of times an hour by the parent
+birds, bringing insects captured while flying over the water.</p>
+
+<p>Some species of munia breed at this time of the year. The red
+munia, or amadavat, or <i>lal</i> (<i>Estrelda amandava</i>) is, next to
+the paroquet, the bird most commonly caged in India. This little
+exquisite is considerably smaller than a sparrow. Its bill is
+bright crimson, and there is some red or crimson in the
+plumage&mdash;more in the cock than in the hen, and most in both sexes
+at the breeding season. The remainder of the plumage is brown,
+but is everywhere heavily spotted with white. In a state of
+nature these birds affect long grass, for they feed largely, if
+not entirely, on grass seed. The cock has a sweet voice, which,
+although feeble, is sufficiently loud to be heard at some
+distance and is frequently uttered.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of the amadavat is large for the size <a name="page16"></a>of the bird,
+being a loosely-woven cup, which is egg-shaped and has a hole at
+or near the narrow end. It is composed of fine grass stems and
+is often lined with soft material. It is usually placed in the
+middle of a bush, sometimes in a tussock of grass. From six to
+fourteen eggs are laid. These are white in colour. This species
+appears to breed twice in the year&mdash;from October to February and
+again from June to August.</p>
+
+<p>The white-throated munia (<i>Uroloncha malabarica</i>) is a dull
+brown bird, with a white patch above the tail. Its throat is
+yellowish white. The old name for the bird&mdash;the plain brown
+munia&mdash;seems more appropriate than that with which the species
+has since been saddled by Blanford. The nest of this little bird
+is more loosely put together and more globular than that of the
+amadavat. It is usually placed low down in a thorny bush. The
+number of eggs laid varies from six to fifteen. These, like
+those of the red munia, are white. June seems to be the only
+month in the year in which the eggs of this species have not
+been found. In the United Provinces more nests containing eggs
+are discovered in January than in any other month.</p>
+<a name="page17"></a>
+<p>Occasionally in January a pair of hoopoes (<i>Upupa indica</i>)
+steals a march on its brethren by selecting a nesting site and
+laying eggs. Hoopoes nest in holes in trees or buildings. The
+aperture to the nest cavity is invariably small. The hen hoopoe
+alone incubates, and as, when once she has begun to sit, she
+rarely, if ever, leaves the nest till the eggs are hatched, the
+cock has to bring food to her. But, to describe the nesting
+operations of the hoopoe in January is like talking of cricket
+in April. It is in February and March that the hoopoes nest in
+their millions, and call softly, from morn till eve, <i>uk-uk-uk</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Of the other birds which nest later in the season mention must
+be made in the calendar for the present month of the Indian
+cliff-swallow (<i>Hirundo fluvicola</i>) and the blue rock-pigeon
+(<i>Columba intermedia</i>), because their nests are sometimes seen
+in January.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page18"></a>
+<h3><a name="february">FEBRUARY</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="february poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>There's perfume upon every wind,<br>
+ Music in every tree,<br>
+ Dews for the moisture-loving flowers,<br>
+ Sweets for the sucking-bee.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ N. P. W<small>ILLIS.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Even as January in northern India may be compared to a month
+made up of English May days and March nights, so may the Indian
+February be likened to a halcyon month composed of sparkling,
+sun-steeped June days and cool starlit April nights.</p>
+
+<p>February is the most pleasant month of the whole year in both
+the Punjab and the United Provinces; even November must yield
+the palm to it. The climate is perfect. The nights and early
+mornings are cool and invigorating; the remainder of each day is
+pleasantly warm; the sun's rays, although gaining strength day
+by day, do not become uncomfortably hot save in the extreme
+south of the United Provinces. The night mists, so
+characteristic <a name="page19"></a>of December and January, are almost unknown in
+February, and the light dews that form during the hours of
+darkness disappear shortly after sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian countryside is now good to look upon; it possesses
+all the beauties of the landscape of July; save the sunsets. The
+soft emerald hue of the young wheat and barley is rendered more
+vivid by contrast with the deep rich green of the mango trees.
+Into the earth's verdant carpet is worked a gay pattern of white
+poppies, purple linseed blooms, blue and pink gram flowers, and
+yellow blossoms of mimosa, mustard and <a href="#arhar"><i>arhar</i></a>. Towards the end
+of the month the silk-cotton trees (<i>Bombax malabarica</i>) begin
+to put forth their great red flowers, but not until March does
+each look like a great scarlet nosegay.</p>
+
+<p>The patches of sugar-cane grow smaller day by day, and in nearly
+every village the little presses are at work from morn till eve.</p>
+
+<p>From the guava groves issue the rattle of tin pots and the
+shouts of the boys told off to protect the ripening fruit from
+the attacks of crows, parrots and other feathered marauders. Nor
+do these sounds terminate at night-fall; indeed they become
+louder after dark, for it is <a name="page20"></a>then that the flying-foxes come
+forth and work sad havoc among fruit of all descriptions.</p>
+
+<p>The fowls of the air are more vivacious than they were in
+January. The bulbuls tinkle more blithely, the purple sunbirds
+sing more lustily; the <i>kutur</i>, <i>kutur</i>, <i>kuturuk</i> of the green
+barbets is uttered more vociferously; the nuthatches now put
+their whole soul into their loud, sharp <i>tee-tee-tee-tee</i>, the
+hoopoes call <i>uk-uk-uk</i> more vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>The coppersmiths (<i>Xantholaema haematocephala</i>) begin to hammer
+on their anvils&mdash;<i>tonk-tonk-tonk-tonk</i>, softly and spasmodically
+in the early days of the month, but with greater frequency and
+intensity as the days pass. The brain-fever bird (<i>Hierococcyx
+varius</i>) announces his arrival in the United Provinces by
+uttering an occasional "brain-fever." As the month draws to its
+close his utterances become more frequent. But his time is not
+yet. He merely gives us in February a foretaste of what is to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>tew</i> of the black-headed oriole (<i>Oriolus melanocephalus</i>),
+which is the only note uttered by the bird in the colder months,
+is occasionally replaced in February by the summer call of the
+species&mdash;a liquid, musical <i>peeho</i>. In the <a name="page21"></a>latter half of the
+month the Indian robin (<i>Thamnobia cambayensis</i>) begins to find
+his voice. Although not the peer of his English cousin, he is no
+mean singer. At this time of year, however, his notes are harsh.
+He is merely "getting into form."</p>
+
+<p>The feeble, but sweet, song of the crested lark or <i>Chandul</i> is
+one of the features of February. The Indian skylark likewise may
+now be heard singing at Heaven's gate in places where there are
+large tracts of uncultivated land. As in January so in February
+the joyous "Think of me ... Never to be" of the grey-headed
+flycatcher emanates from every <a href="#tope">tope</a>.</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of the month the pied wagtails and pied bush chats
+are in full song. Their melodies, though of small volume, are
+very sweet.</p>
+
+<p>The large grey shrikes add the clamour of their courtship to the
+avian chorus.</p>
+
+<p>Large numbers of doves, vultures, eagles, red-headed merlins,
+martins and munias&mdash;birds whose nests were described in
+January&mdash;are still busy feeding their young.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the brown fish-owls (<i>Ketupa ceylonensis</i>) and
+rock horned-owls (<i>Bubo <a name="page22"></a>bengalensis</i>) are sitting; a few of them
+are feeding young birds. The dusky horned-owls (<i>B. coromandus</i>)
+have either finished breeding or are tending nestlings. In
+addition to the nests of the above-mentioned owls those of the
+collared scops owl (<i>Scops bakkamaena</i>) and the mottled wood-owl
+(<i>Syrnium ocellatum</i>) are likely to be found at this season of
+the year. The scops is a small owl with aigrettes or "horns,"
+the wood-owl is a large bird without aigrettes.</p>
+
+<p>Both nest in holes in trees and lay white eggs after the manner
+of their kind. The scops owl breeds from January till April,
+while February and March are the months in which to look for the
+eggs of the wood-owl.</p>
+
+<p>In the western districts of the United Provinces the Indian
+cliff-swallows (<i>Hirundo fluvicola</i>) are beginning to construct
+their curious nests. Here and there a pair of blue rock-pigeons
+(<i>Colombia intermedia</i>) is busy with eggs or young ones. In the
+Punjab the ravens are likewise employed.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season of the hoopoe has now fairly commenced.
+Courtship is the order of the day. The display of this beautiful
+species is not at all elaborate. The bird that "shows off"
+merely runs along the ground with corona <a name="page23"></a>fully expanded. Mating
+hoopoes, however, perform strange antics in the air; they twist
+and turn and double, just as a flycatcher does when chasing a
+fleet insect. Both the hoopoe and the roller are veritable
+aerial acrobats. By the end of the month all but a few of the
+hoopoes have begun to nest; most of them have eggs, while the
+early birds, described in January as stealing a march on their
+brethren, are feeding their offspring. The 6th February is the
+earliest date on which the writer has observed a hoopoe carrying
+food to the nest; that was at Ghazipur.</p>
+
+<p>March and April are the months in which the majority of
+coppersmiths or crimson-breasted barbets rear up their families.
+Some, however, are already working at their nests. The eggs are
+hatched in a cavity in a tree&mdash;a cavity made by means of the
+bird's bill. Both sexes take part in nest construction. A
+neatly-cut circular hole, about the size of a rupee, on the
+lower surface or the side of a branch is assuredly the entrance
+to the nest of a coppersmith, a green barbet, or a woodpecker.</p>
+
+<p>As the month draws to its close many a pair of nuthatches
+(<i>Sitta castaneiventris</i>) may be <a name="page24"></a>observed seeking for a hollow
+in which to nestle. The site selected is usually a small hole in
+the trunk of a mango tree that has weathered many monsoons. The
+birds reduce the orifice of the cavity to a very small size by
+plastering up the greater part of it with mud. Hence the nest of
+the nuthatch, unless discovered when in course of construction,
+is difficult to locate.</p>
+
+<p>All the cock sunbirds (<i>Arachnechthra asiatica</i>) are now in the
+full glory of their nuptial plumage. Here and there an energetic
+little hen is busily constructing her wonderful pendent nest.
+Great is the variety of building material used by the sunbird.
+Fibres, slender roots, pliable stems, pieces of decayed wood,
+lichen, thorns and even paper, cotton and rags, are pressed into
+service. All are held together by cobweb, which is the favourite
+cement of bird masons. The general shape of the nest is that of
+a pear. Its contour is often irregular, because some of the
+materials hang loosely from the outer surface.</p>
+
+<p>The nursery is attached by means of cobweb to the beam or branch
+from which it hangs. It is cosily lined with cotton or other
+soft material. The hen, who alone builds the nest <a name="page25"></a>and incubates
+the eggs, enters and leaves the chamber by a hole at one side.
+This is protected by a little penthouse. The door serves also as
+window. The hen rests her chin on the lower part of this while
+she is incubating her eggs, and thus is able, as she sits, to
+see what is going on in the great world without. She displays
+little fear of man and takes no pains to conceal her nest, which
+is often built in the verandah of an inhabited bungalow.</p>
+
+<p>As the month nears its end the big black crows (<i>Corvus
+macrorhynchus</i>) begin to construct their nests. The site
+selected is usually a forked branch of a large tree. The nest is
+a clumsy platform of sticks with a slight depression, lined by
+human or horse hair or other soft material, for the reception of
+the eggs. Both sexes take part in incubation. From the time the
+first egg is laid until the young are big enough to leave the
+nest this is very rarely left unguarded. When one parent is away
+the other remains sitting on the eggs, or, after the young have
+hatched out, on the edge of the nest. Crows are confirmed
+egg-stealers and nestling-lifters, and, knowing the guile that
+is in their own hearts, keep a careful watch over their
+offspring.</p>
+<a name="page26"></a>
+<p>The kites (<i>Milvus govinda</i>) are likewise busy at their
+nurseries. At this season of the year they are noisier than
+usual, which is saying a great deal. They not only utter
+unceasingly their shrill <i>chee-hee-hee-hee</i>, but engage in many
+a squabble with the crows.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of the kite, like that of the corby, is an untidy mass
+of sticks and twigs placed conspicuously in a lofty tree. Dozens
+of these nests are to be seen in every Indian cantonment in
+February and March. Why the crows and the kites should prefer
+the trees in a cantonment to those in the town or surrounding
+country has yet to be discovered.</p>
+
+<p>Mention has already been made of the fact that January is the
+month in which the majority of the tawny eagles nest; not a few,
+however, defer operations till February. Hume states that, of
+the 159 eggs of this species of which he has a record, 38 were
+taken in December, 83 in January and 28 in February.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season of the white-backed vulture is drawing to a
+close. On the other hand, that of the black or Pondicherry
+vulture (<i>Otogyps calvus</i>) is beginning. This species may be
+readily distinguished from the other vultures, by its large
+size, its white thighs and <a name="page27"></a>the red wattles that hang down from
+the sides of the head like drooping ears.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of this bird is a massive platform of sticks, large
+enough to accommodate two or three men. Hume once demolished one
+of these vulturine nurseries and found that it weighed over
+eight maunds, that is to say about six hundredweight. This
+vulture usually builds its nest in a lofty <i>pipal</i> tree, but in
+localities devoid of tall trees the platform is placed on the
+top of a bush.</p>
+
+<p>February marks the beginning of the nesting season of the
+handsome pied kingfisher (<i>Ceryle rudis</i>). This is the familiar,
+black-and-white bird that fishes by hovering kestrel-like on
+rapidly-vibrating wings and then dropping from a height of some
+twenty feet into the water below; it is a bird greatly addicted
+to goldfish and makes sad havoc of these where they are exposed
+in ornamental ponds. The nest of the pied kingfisher is a
+circular tunnel or burrow, more than a yard in length, excavated
+in a river bank. The burrow, which is dug out by the bird, is
+about three inches in diameter and terminates in a larger
+chamber in which the eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>Another spotted black-and-white bird which <a name="page28"></a>now begins nesting
+operations is the yellow-fronted pied woodpecker (<i>Liopicus
+mahrattensis</i>)&mdash;a species only a little less common than the
+beautiful golden-backed woodpecker. Like all the Picidae this
+bird nests in the trunk or a branch of a tree. Selecting a part
+of a tree which is decayed&mdash;sometimes a portion of the bole
+quite close to the ground&mdash;the woodpecker hews out with its
+chisel-like beak a neat circular tunnel leading to the cavity in
+the decayed wood in which the eggs will be deposited. The tap,
+tap, tap of the bill as it cuts into the wood serves to guide
+the observer to the spot where the woodpecker, with legs apart
+and tail adpressed to the tree, is at work. In the same way a
+barbet's nest, while under construction, may be located with
+ease. A woodpecker when excavating its nest will often allow a
+human being to approach sufficiently dose to witness it throw
+over its shoulder the chips of wood it has cut away with its
+bill.</p>
+
+<p>In the United Provinces many of the ashy-crowned finch-larks
+(<i>Pyrrhulauda grisea</i>) build their nests during February. In the
+Punjab they breed later; April and May being the months in which
+their eggs are most often found in that province. These curious
+<a name="page29"></a>squat-figured little birds are rendered easy of recognition by
+the unusual scheme of colouring displayed by the cock&mdash;his upper
+parts are earthy grey and his lower plumage is black.</p>
+
+<p>The habit of the finch-lark is to soar to a little height and
+then drop to the ground, with wings closed, singing as it
+descends. It invariably affects open plains. There are very few
+tracts of treeless land in India which are not tenanted by
+finch-larks. The nest is a mere pad of grass and feathers placed
+on the ground in a tussock of grass, beside a clod of earth, or
+in a depression, such as a hoof-print. The most expeditious way
+of finding nests of these birds in places where they are
+abundant is to walk with a line of beaters over a tract of
+fallow land and mark carefully the spots from which the birds
+rise.</p>
+
+<p>With February the nesting season of the barn-owls (<i>Strix
+flammea</i>) begins in the United Provinces, where their eggs have
+been taken as early as the 17th.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of the month the white-browed fantail
+flycatchers (<i>Rhipidura albifrontata</i>) begin to nest. The loud
+and cheerful song of this little feathered exquisite is a tune
+of <a name="page30"></a>six or seven notes that ascend and descend the musical scale.
+It is one of the most familiar of the sounds that gladden the
+Indian countryside. The broad white eyebrow and the manner in
+which, with drooping wings and tail spread into a fan, this
+flycatcher waltzes and pirouettes among the branches of a tree
+render it unmistakable. The nest is a dainty little cup, covered
+with cobweb, attached to one of the lower boughs of a tree. So
+small is the nursery that sometimes the incubating bird looks as
+though it were sitting across a branch. This species appears to
+rear two broods every year. The first comes into existence in
+March or late February in the United Provinces and five or six
+weeks later in the Punjab; the second brood emerges during the
+monsoon.</p>
+
+<p>The white-eyed buzzards&mdash;weakest of all the birds of prey&mdash;begin
+to pair towards the end of the month. At this season they
+frequently rise high above the earth and soar, emitting
+plaintive cries.</p>
+
+<p>The handsome, but destructive, green parrots are now seeking, or
+making, cavities in trees or buildings in which to deposit their
+white eggs.</p>
+<a name="page31"></a>
+<p>The breeding season for the alexandrine (<i>Palaeornis eupatrius</i>)
+and the rose-ringed paroquet (<i>P. torquatus</i>) begins at the end
+of January or early in February. March is the month in which
+most eggs are taken.</p>
+
+<p>In April and May the bird-catchers go round and collect the
+nestlings in order to sell them at four annas apiece. Green
+parrots are the most popular cage birds in India. Destructive
+though they be and a scourge to the husbandman, one cannot but
+pity the luckless captives doomed to spend practically the whole
+of their existence in small iron cages, which, when exposed to
+the sun in the hot weather, as they often are, must be veritable
+infernos.</p>
+
+<p>The courtship of a pair of green parrots is as amusing to watch
+as that of any 'Arry and 'Arriet. Not possessing hats the
+amorous birds are unable to exchange them, but otherwise their
+actions are quite coster-like. The female twists herself into
+all manner of ridiculous postures and utters low twittering
+notes. The cock sits at her side and admires. Every now and then
+he shows his appreciation of her antics by tickling her head
+with his beak or by joining his bill to hers.</p>
+<a name="page32"></a>
+<p>Both the grey shrike and the wood-shrike begin nesting
+operations in February. As, however, most of their nests are
+likely to be found later in the year they are dealt with in the
+calendar for March.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page33"></a>
+<h3><a name="march">MARCH</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="march poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>And all the jungle laughed with nesting songs,<br>
+ And all the thickets rustled with small life<br>
+ Of lizard, bee, beetle, and creeping things<br>
+ Pleased at the spring time. In the mango sprays<br>
+ The sun-birds flashed; alone at his green forge<br>
+ Toiled the loud coppersmith; . . .</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ A<small>RNOLD</small>. <i>T<small>he</small> L<small>ight of</small> A<small>sia</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>In March the climate of the plains of the United Provinces
+varies from place to place. In the western sub-Himalayan tracts,
+as in the Punjab, the weather still leaves little to be desired.
+The sun indeed is powerful; towards the end of the month the
+maximum shade temperature exceeds 80&deg;, but the nights and
+early mornings are delightfully cool. In all the remaining parts
+of the United Provinces, except the extreme south, temperate
+weather prevails until nearly the end of the month. In the last
+days the noonday heat becomes so great that many persons close
+their bungalows for several hours daily to keep them cool, the
+outer temperature rising to ninety in the <a name="page34"></a>shade. At night,
+however, the temperature drops to 65&deg;. In the extreme
+south of the Province the hot weather sets in by the middle of
+March. The sky assumes a brazen aspect and, at midday, the
+country is swept by westerly winds which seem to come from a
+titanic blast furnace.</p>
+
+<p>The spring crops grow more golden day by day. The mustard is the
+first to ripen. The earlier-sown fields are harvested in March
+in the eastern and southern parts of the country. The spring
+cereals are cut by hand sickles, the grain is then husked by the
+tramping of cattle, and, lastly, the chaff is separated from the
+grain on the threshing floor, the hot burning wind often acting
+as a natural winnowing fan.</p>
+
+<p>The air is heavily scented with the inconspicuous inflorescences
+of the mangos (<i>Mangifera indica</i>). The pipals (<i>Ficus
+religiosa</i>) are shedding their leaves; the <i>sheshams</i>
+(<i>Dalbergia sissoo</i>) are assuming their emerald spring foliage.</p>
+
+<p>The garden, the jungle and the forest are beautified by the
+gorgeous reds of the flowers of the silk-cotton tree (<i>Bombax
+malabarica</i>), the Indian coral tree (<i>Erythrina indica</i>) and <a name="page35"></a>the
+flame-of-the-forest (<i>Butea frondosa</i>). The sub-Himalayan
+forests become yellow-tinted owing to the fading of the leaves
+of the <i>sal</i> (<i>Shorea robusta</i>), many of which are shed in
+March. The <i>sal</i>, however, is never entirely leafless; the young
+foliage appears as the old drops off; while this change is
+taking place the minute pale yellow flowers open out.</p>
+
+<p>The familiar yellow wasps, which have been hibernating during
+the cold weather, emerge from their hiding-places and begin to
+construct their umbrella-shaped nests or combs, which look as if
+they were made of rice-paper.</p>
+
+<p>March is a month of great activity for the birds. Those that
+constituted the avian chorus of February continue to sing, and
+to their voices are now added those of many other minstrels.
+Chief of these is the pied singer of Ind&mdash;the magpie-robin or
+<i>dhayal</i>&mdash;whose song is as beautiful as that of the English
+robin at his best. From the housetops the brown rock-chat begins
+to pour forth his exceedingly sweet lay. The Indian robin is in
+full song. The little golden ioras, hidden away amid dense
+foliage, utter their many joyful sounds. <a name="page36"></a>The brain-fever bird
+grows more vociferous day by day. The crow-pheasants, which have
+been comparatively silent during the colder months of the year,
+now begin to utter their low sonorous <i>whoot</i>, <i>whoot</i>, <i>whoot</i>,
+which is heard chiefly at dawn.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere the birds are joyful and noisy; nowhere more so than
+at the silk-cotton and the coral trees. These, although
+botanically very different, display many features in common.
+They begin to lose their leaves soon after the monsoon is over,
+and are leafless by the end of the winter. In the early spring,
+while the tree is still devoid of foliage, huge scarlet, crimson
+or yellow flowers emerge from every branch. Each flower is
+plentifully supplied with honey; it is a flowing bowl of which
+all are invited to partake, and hundreds of thousands of birds
+accept the invitation with right good-will. The scene at each of
+these trees, when in full flower, baffles description.</p>
+
+<p>Scores of birds forgather there&mdash;rosy starlings, mynas,
+babblers, bulbuls, king-crows, tree-pies, green parrots,
+sunbirds and crows. These all drink riotously and revel so
+loudly that the sound may be heard at a distance of half a mile
+or more. Even before the sun has <a name="page37"></a>risen and begun to dispel the
+pleasant coolness of the night the drinking begins. It continues
+throughout the hours of daylight. Towards midday, when the west
+wind blows very hot, it flags somewhat, but even when the
+temperature is nearer 100&deg; than 90&deg; some avian
+brawlers are present. As soon as the first touch of the
+afternoon coolness is felt the clamour acquires fresh vigour and
+does not cease until the sun has set in a dusty haze, and the
+spotted owlets have emerged and begun to cackle and call as is
+their wont.</p>
+
+<p>These last are by no means the only birds that hold concert
+parties during the hours of darkness. In open country the jungle
+owlet and the dusky-horned owl call at intervals, and the Indian
+nightjar (<i>Caprimulgus asiaticus</i>) imitates the sound of a stone
+skimming over ice. In the forest tracts Franklin's and
+Horsfield's nightjars make the welkin ring. Scarce has the sun
+disappeared below the horizon when the former issues forth and
+utters its harsh <i>tweet</i>. Horsfield's nightjar emerges a few
+minutes later, and, for some hours after dusk and for several
+before dawn, it utters incessantly its loud monotonous <i>chuck</i>,
+<i>chuck</i>, <i>chuck</i>, <i>chuck</i>, <i>chuck</i>, which has been aptly
+<a name="page38"></a>compared to the sound made by striking a plank sharply with a
+hammer.</p>
+
+<p>March is the month in which the majority of the shrikes or
+butcher-birds go a-courting. There is no false modesty about
+butcher-birds. They are not ashamed to introduce their
+unmelodious calls into the avian chorus. But they are mild
+offenders in comparison with the king-crows (<i>Dicrurus ater</i>)
+and the rollers (<i>Coracias indica</i>).</p>
+
+<p>The little black king-crows are at all seasons noisy and
+vivacious: from the end of February until the rains have set in
+they are positively uproarious. Two or three of them love to sit
+on a telegraph wire, or a bare branch of a tree, and hold a
+concert. The first performer draws itself up to its full height
+and then gives vent to harsh cries. Before it has had time to
+deliver itself of all it has to sing, an impatient neighbour
+joins in and tries to shout it down. The concert may last for
+half an hour or longer; the scene is shifted from time to time
+as the participants become too excited to sit still. The
+king-crows so engaged appear to be selecting their mates;
+nevertheless nest-construction does not begin before the end of
+April.</p>
+<a name="page39"></a>
+<p>Some human beings may fail to notice the courtship of the
+king-crow, but none can be so deaf and blind as to miss the
+love-making of the gorgeous roller or blue jay. Has not everyone
+marvelled at the hoarse cries and rasping screams which emanate
+from these birds as they fling themselves into the air and
+ascend and descend as though they were being tossed about by
+unseen hands?</p>
+
+<p>Their wonderful aerial performances go on continually in the
+hours of daylight throughout the months of March and April; at
+this season the birds, beautiful although they be, are a
+veritable nuisance, and most people gratefully welcome the
+comparative quiet that supervenes after the eggs have been laid.
+The madness of the March hare is mild compared with that of the
+March roller. It is difficult to realise that the harsh and
+angry-sounding cries of these birds denote, not rage, but joy.</p>
+
+<p>The great exodus of the winter visitors from the plains of India
+begins in March. It continues until mid-May, by which time the
+last of the migratory birds will have reached its distant
+breeding ground.</p>
+
+<p>This exodus is usually preceded by the gathering into flocks of
+the rose-coloured <a name="page40"></a>starlings and the corn-buntings. Large noisy
+congregations of these birds are a striking feature of February
+in Bombay, of March in the United Provinces, and of April in the
+Punjab.</p>
+
+<p>Rose-coloured starlings spend most of their lives in the plains
+of India, going to Asia Minor for a few months each summer for
+nesting purposes. In the autumn they spread themselves over the
+greater part of Hindustan, most abundantly in the Deccan.</p>
+
+<p>In the third or fourth week of February the rosy starlings of
+Bombay begin to form flocks. These make merry among the flowers
+of the coral tree, which appear first in South India, and last
+in the Punjab. The noisy flocks journey northwards in a
+leisurely manner, timing their arrival at each place
+simultaneously with the flowering of the coral trees. They feed
+on the nectar provided by these flowers and those of the
+silk-cotton tree. They also take toll of the ripening corn and
+of the mulberries which are now in season. Thus the rosy
+starlings reach Allahabad about the second week in March, and
+Lahore some fifteen days later.</p>
+
+<p>The head, neck, breast, wings and tail of <a name="page41"></a>the rosy starling are
+glossy black, and the remainder of the plumage is pale salmon in
+the hen and the young cock, and faint rose-colour in the adult
+cock.</p>
+
+<p>Rosy starlings feed chiefly in the morning and the late
+afternoon. During the hottest part of the day they perch in
+trees and hold a concert, if such a term may be applied to a
+torrent of sibilant twitter.</p>
+
+<p>Buntings, like rosy starlings, are social birds, and are very
+destructive to grain crops.</p>
+
+<p>As these last are harvested the feeding area of the buntings
+becomes restricted, so that eventually every patch of standing
+crop is alive with buntings. The spring cereals ripen in the
+south earlier than in northern India, so that the cheerful
+buntings are able to perform their migratory journey by easy
+stages and find abundant food all along the route.</p>
+
+<p>There are two species of corn-bunting&mdash;the red-headed (<i>Emberiza
+luteola</i>) and the black-headed (<i>E. melanocephala</i>). In both the
+lower plumage is bright yellow.</p>
+
+<p>Among the earliest of the birds to forsake the plains of
+Hindustan are the grey-lag goose and the pintail duck. These
+leave Bengal in <a name="page42"></a>February, but tarry longer in the cooler parts
+of the country. Of the other migratory species many individuals
+depart in March, but the greater number remain on into April,
+when they are caught up in the great migratory wave that surges
+over the country. The destination of the majority of these
+migrants is Tibet or Siberia, but a few are satisfied with the
+cool slopes of the Himalayas as a summer resort in which to busy
+themselves with the sweet cares of nesting. Examples of these
+more local migrants are the grey-headed and the verditer
+flycatchers, the Indian bush-chat and, to some extent, the
+paradise flycatcher and the Indian oriole. The case of the
+oriole is interesting. All the Indian orioles (<i>Oriolus kundoo</i>)
+disappear from the Punjab and the United Provinces in winter. In
+the former province no other oriole replaces <i>O. kundoo</i>, but in
+the United Provinces the black-headed oriole (<i>O.
+melanocephalus</i>) comes to take the place of the other from
+October to March. When this last returns to the United Provinces
+in March the greater number of <i>melanocephalus</i> individuals go
+east, a few only remaining in the sub-Himalayan tracts of the
+province.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian oriole is not the only species <a name="page43"></a>which finds the
+climate of the United Provinces too severe for it in winter; the
+koel and the paradise flycatcher likewise desert us in the
+coldest months. From the less temperate Punjab several species
+migrate in October which manage to maintain themselves in the
+United Provinces throughout the year: these are the purple
+sunbird, the little green and the blue-tailed bee-eaters, and
+the yellow-throated sparrow. The return of these and the other
+migrant species to the Punjab in March is as marked a phenomenon
+as is the arrival of the swallow and the cuckoo in England in
+spring.</p>
+
+<p>The behaviour of the king-crows shows the marked effect a
+comparatively small difference of temperature may exert on the
+habits of some birds. In the United Provinces the king-crows
+appear to be as numerous in winter as in summer: in the Punjab
+they are very plentiful in summer, but rare in the cold weather;
+while not a single king-crow winters in the N.-W. Frontier
+Province.</p>
+
+<p>Of the birds of which the nests were described in January and
+February the Pallas's fishing eagles have sent their nestlings
+into the world to fend for themselves.</p>
+<a name="page44"></a>
+<p>In the case of the following birds the breeding season is fast
+drawing to its close:&mdash;the dusky horned-owl, the white-backed
+vulture, Bonelli's eagle, the tawny eagle, the brown fish-owl,
+the rock horned-owl, the raven, the amadavat and the
+white-throated munia.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season is at its height for all the other birds of
+which the nests have been described, namely, most species of
+dove, the jungle crow, the red-headed merlin, the purple
+sunbird, the nuthatch, the fantail flycatcher, the finch-lark,
+the pied woodpecker, the coppersmith, the alexandrine and the
+rose-ringed paroquet, the white-eyed buzzard, the collared scops
+and the mottled wood-owl, the kite, the black vulture and the
+pied kingfisher.</p>
+
+<p>The sand-martins breed from October to May, consequently their
+nests, containing eggs or young, are frequently taken in March.
+Mention was made in January and February of the Indian
+cliff-swallow (<i>Hirundo fluvicola</i>). This species is not found
+in the eastern districts of the United Provinces, but it is the
+common swallow of the western districts. The head is dull
+chestnut. The back and shoulders are glistening steel-blue. The
+remainder of the upper plumage is brown. The lower parts <a name="page45"></a>are
+white with brown streaks, which are most apparent on the throat
+and upper breast. These swallows normally nest at two seasons of
+the year&mdash;from February till April and in July or August.</p>
+
+<p>They breed in colonies. The mud nests are spherical or oval with
+an entrance tube from two to six inches long. The nests are
+invariably attached to a cliff or building, and, although
+isolated ones are built sometimes, they usually occur in
+clusters, as many as two hundred have been counted in one
+cluster. In such a case a section cut parallel to the surface to
+which the nests are attached looks like that of a huge honeycomb
+composed of cells four inches in diameter&mdash;cells of a kind that
+one could expect to be built by bees that had partaken of Mr. H.
+G. Wells' "food of the gods."</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful white-breasted kingfisher, (<i>Halcyon smyrnensis</i>)
+is now busy at its nest.</p>
+
+<p>This species spends most of its life in shady gardens; it feeds
+on insects in preference to fish. It does not invariably select
+a river bank in which to nest, it is quite content with a sand
+quarry, a bank, or the shaft of a <i>kachcha</i> well. The nest
+consists of a passage, some two <a name="page46"></a>feet in length and three inches
+in diameter, leading to a larger chamber in which from four to
+seven eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>A pair of white-breasted kingfishers at work during the early
+stages of nest construction affords an interesting spectacle.
+Not being able to obtain a foothold on the almost perpendicular
+surface of the bank, the birds literally charge this in turn
+with fixed beak. By a succession of such attacks at one spot a
+hole of an appreciable size is soon formed in the soft sand.
+Then the birds are able to obtain a foothold and to excavate
+with the bill, while clinging to the edge of the hole. Every now
+and then they indulge in a short respite from their labours.
+While thus resting one of the pair will sometimes spread its
+wings for an instant and display the white patch; then it will
+close them and make a neat bow, as if to say "Is not that nice?"
+Its companion may remain motionless and unresponsive, or may
+return the compliment.</p>
+
+<p>In the first days of March the bulbuls begin to breed. In 1912
+the writer saw a pair of bulbuls (<i>Otocompsa emeria</i>) building a
+nest on the 3rd March. By the 10th the structure was <a name="page47"></a>complete
+and held the full clutch of three eggs. On that date a second
+nest was found containing three eggs.</p>
+
+<p>In 1913 the writer first saw a bulbul's nest on the 5th March.
+This belonged to <i>Molpastes bengalensis</i> and contained two eggs.
+On the following day the full clutch of three was in the nest.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season for these birds terminates in the rains.</p>
+
+<p>The common bulbuls of the plains belong to two
+genera&mdash;<i>Molpastes</i> and <i>Otocompsa</i>. The former is split up into
+a number of local species which display only small differences
+in appearance and interbreed freely at the places where they
+meet. They are known as the Madras, the Bengal, the Punjab,
+etc., red-vented bulbul. They are somewhat larger than sparrows.
+The head, which bears a short crest, and the face are black; the
+rest of the body, except a patch of bright red under the tail,
+is brown, each feather having a pale margin.</p>
+
+<p>In <i>Otocompsa</i> the crest is long and rises to a sharp point
+which curves forward a little over the beak. The breast is
+white, set off by a black gorget. There is the usual red patch
+<a name="page48"></a>under the tail and a patch of the same hue on each side of the
+face, whence the English name for the bird&mdash;the red-whiskered
+bulbul.</p>
+
+<p><i>Molpastes</i> and <i>Otocompsa</i> have similar habits. They are
+feckless little birds that build cup-shaped nests in all manner
+of queer and exposed situations. Those that live near the
+habitations of Europeans nestle in low bushes in the garden, or
+in pot plants in the verandah. Small crotons are often selected,
+preferably those that do not bear a score of leaves. The sitting
+bulbul does not appear to mind the daily shower-bath it receives
+when the <i>mali</i> waters the plant. Sometimes as many as three or
+four pairs of bulbuls attempt to rear up families in one
+verandah. The word "attempt" is used advisedly, because, owing
+to the exposed situations in which nests are built, large
+numbers of eggs and young bulbuls are destroyed by boys, cats,
+snakes and other predaceous creatures. The average bulbul loses
+six broods for every one it succeeds in rearing. The eggs are
+pink with reddish markings.</p>
+
+<p>March is the month in which to look for the nest of the Indian
+wren-warbler (<i>Prinia inornata</i>). <i>Inornata</i> is a very
+appropriate <a name="page49"></a>specific name for this tiny earth-brown bird, which
+is devoid of all kind of ornamentation. Its voice is as homely
+as its appearance&mdash;a harsh but plaintive <i>twee</i>, <i>twee</i>, <i>twee</i>.
+It weaves a nest which looks like a ragged loofah with a hole in
+the side. The nest is usually placed low down in a bush or in
+long grass. Sometimes it is attached to two or more stalks of
+corn. In such cases the corn is often cut before the young birds
+have had time to leave the nest, and then the brood perishes.
+This species brings up a second family in the rainy season.</p>
+
+<p>The barn-owls (<i>Strix flammea</i>) are now breeding. They lay their
+eggs in cavities in trees, buildings or walls. In northern India
+the nesting season lasts from February to June. Eggs are most
+likely to be found in the United Provinces during the present
+month.</p>
+
+<p>The various species of babblers or seven sisters begin to nest
+in March. Unlike bulbuls these birds are careful to conceal the
+nest. This is a slenderly-built, somewhat untidy cup, placed in
+a bush or tree. The eggs are a beautiful rich blue, without any
+markings.</p>
+
+<p>The hawk-cuckoo, or brain-fever bird (<i>Hierococcyx varius</i>), to
+which allusion has already <a name="page50"></a>been made, deposits its eggs in the
+nests of various species of babblers. The eggs of this cuckoo
+are blue, but are distinguishable from those of the babbler by
+their larger size. It may be noted, in passing, that this cuckoo
+does not extend far into the Punjab.</p>
+
+<p>As stated above, most of the shrikes go a-courting in March.
+Nest-building follows hard on courtship. In this month and in
+April most of the shrikes lay their eggs, but nests containing
+eggs or young are to be seen in May, June, July and August.
+Shrikes are birds of prey in miniature. Although not much larger
+than sparrows they are as fierce as falcons.</p>
+
+<p>Their habit is to seize the quarry on the ground, after having
+pounced upon it from a bush or tree. Grasshoppers constitute
+their usual food, but they are not afraid to tackle mice or
+small birds.</p>
+
+<p>The largest shrike is the grey species (<i>Lanius lahtora</i>). This
+is clothed mainly in grey; however, it has a broad black band
+running through the eye&mdash;the escutcheon of the butcher-bird
+clan. It begins nesting before the other species, and its eggs
+are often taken in February.</p>
+<a name="page51"></a>
+<p>The other common species are the bay-backed (<i>L. vittatus</i>) and
+the rufous-backed shrike (<i>L. erythronotus</i>). These are smaller
+birds and have the back red. The former is distinguishable from
+the latter by having in the wings and tail much white, which is
+very conspicuous during flight.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of each species is a massive cup, composed of twigs,
+thorns, grasses, feathers, and, usually, some pieces of rag;
+these last often hang down in a most untidy manner. The nest is,
+as a rule, placed in a babool or other thorny tree, close up
+against the trunk.</p>
+
+<p>Three allies of the shrikes are likewise busy with their nests
+at this season. These are the wood-shrike, the minivet and the
+cuckoo-shrike. The wood-shrike (<i>Tephrodornis pondicerianus</i>) is
+an ashy-brown bird of the size of a sparrow with a broad white
+eyebrow. It frequently emits a characteristic soft, melancholy,
+whistling note, which Eha describes as "Be thee cheery." How
+impracticable are all efforts to "chain by syllables airy
+sounds"! The cup-like nest of this species is always carefully
+concealed in a tree.</p>
+
+<p>Minivets are aerial exquisites. In descriptions of them
+superlative follows upon superlative. <a name="page52"></a>The cocks of most species
+are arrayed in scarlet and black; the hens are not a whit less
+brilliantly attired in yellow and sable. One species lives
+entirely in the plains, others visit them in the cold weather;
+the majority are permanent residents of the hills. The solitary
+denizen of the plains&mdash;the little minivet (<i>Pericrocotus
+peregrinus</i>)&mdash;is the least resplendent of them all. Its
+prevailing hue is slaty grey, but the cock has a red breast and
+some red on the back. The nest is a cup so small as either to be
+invisible from below or to present the appearance of a knot or
+thickening in the branch on which it is placed. Sometimes two
+broods are reared in the course of the year&mdash;one in March, April
+or May and the other during the rainy season.</p>
+
+<p>The cuckoo-shrike (<i>Grauculus macii</i>) is not nearly related to
+the cuckoo, nor has it the parasitic habits of the latter. Its
+grey plumage is barred like that of the common cuckoo, hence the
+adjective. The cuckoo-shrike is nearly as big as a dove. It
+utters constantly a curious harsh call. It keeps much to the
+higher branches of trees in which it conceals, with great care,
+its saucer-like nest.</p>
+
+<p>As we have seen, some coppersmiths and <a name="page53"></a>pied woodpeckers began
+nesting operations in February, but the great majority do not
+lay eggs until March.</p>
+
+<p>The green barbet (<i>Thereoceryx zeylonicus</i>) and the
+golden-backed woodpecker (<i>Brachypternus aurantius</i>) are now
+busy excavating their nests, which are so similar to those of
+their respective cousins&mdash;the coppersmith and the pied
+woodpecker&mdash;as to require no description. It is not necessary to
+state that the harsh laugh, followed by the <i>kutur</i>, <i>kutur</i>,
+<i>kuturuk</i>, of the green barbet and the eternal <i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i>,
+<i>tonk</i> of the coppersmith are now more vehement than ever, and
+will continue with unabated vigour until the rains have fairly
+set in.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of the month many of the noisy rollers have found
+holes in decayed trees in which the hens can lay their eggs. The
+vociferous nightjars likewise have laid upon the bare ground
+their salmon-pink eggs with strawberry-coloured markings.</p>
+
+<p>The noisy spotted owlets (<i>Athene brama</i>) and the rose-ringed
+paroquets (<i>Palaeornis torquatus</i>) are already the happy
+possessors of clutches of white eggs hidden away in cavities of
+decayed trees or buildings.</p>
+<a name="page54"></a>
+<p>The swifts (<i>Cypselus indicus</i>) also are busy with their nests.
+These are saucer-shaped structures, composed of feathers, straw
+and other materials made to adhere together, and to the beam or
+stone to which the nest is attached, by the glutinous saliva of
+the swifts. Deserted buildings, outhouses and verandahs of
+bungalows are the usual nesting sites of these birds. At this
+season swifts are very noisy. Throughout the day and at frequent
+intervals during the night they emit loud shivering screams. At
+sunset they hold high carnival, playing, at breakneck speed and
+to the accompaniment of much screaming, a game of "follow the
+man from Cook's."</p>
+
+<p>The swifts are not the only birds engaged in rearing up young in
+our verandahs. Sparrows and doves are so employed, as are the
+wire-tailed swallows (<i>Hirundo smithii</i>). These last are
+steel-blue birds with red heads and white under plumage. They
+derive the name "wire-tailed" from the fact that the thin shafts
+of the outer pair of tail feathers are prolonged five inches
+beyond the others and look like wires. Wire-tailed swallows
+occasionally build in verandahs, but they prefer to attach their
+<a name="page55"></a>saucer-shaped mud nests to the arches of bridges and culverts.</p>
+
+<p>With a nest in such a situation the parent birds are not obliged
+to go far for the mud with which the nest is made, or for the
+insects, caught over the surface of water, on which the
+offspring are fed.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season of wire-tailed swallows is a long one.
+According to Hume these beautiful birds breed chiefly in
+February and March and again in July, August and September.
+However, he states that he has seen eggs as early as January and
+as late as November. In the Himalayas he has obtained the eggs
+in April, May and June.</p>
+
+<p>The present writer's experience does not agree with that of
+Hume. In Lahore, Saharanpur and Pilibhit, May and June are the
+months in which most nests of this species are likely to be
+seen. The writer has found nests with eggs or young on the
+following dates in the above-mentioned places: May 13th, 15th,
+16th, 17th; June 6th and 28th.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of June 28th was attached to a rafter of the front
+verandah of a bungalow at Lahore. The owner of the house stated
+that the swallows in question had already reared <a name="page56"></a>one brood that
+year, and that the birds in question had nested in his verandah
+for some years. There is no doubt that some wire-tailed swallows
+bring up two broods. Such would seem to breed, as Hume says, in
+February and March and again in July and August. But, as many
+nests containing eggs are found in May, some individuals appear
+to have one brood only, which hatches out in May or June.</p>
+
+<p>Those useful but ugly fowls, the white scavenger vultures
+(<i>Neophron ginginianus</i>), depart from the ways of their brethren
+in that they nidificate in March and April instead of in January
+and February. The nest is an evil-smelling pile of sticks, rags
+and rubbish. It is placed on some building or in a tree.</p>
+
+<p>The handsome brahminy kites (<i>Haliastur indicus</i>), attired in
+chestnut and white, are now busily occupied, either in seeking
+for sites or in actually building their nests, which resemble
+those of the common kite.</p>
+
+<p>In the open plains the pipits (<i>Anthus rufulus</i>) and the crested
+larks (<i>Galerita cristata</i>) are keeping the nesting finch-larks
+company.</p>
+
+<p>All three species build the same kind of nest&mdash;a cup of grass or
+fibres (often a deep cup in <a name="page57"></a>the case of the crested lark) placed
+on the ground in a hole or a depression, or protected by a
+tussock of grass or a small bush.</p>
+
+<p>On the churs and sand islets in the large Indian rivers the
+terns are busy with their eggs, which are deposited on the bare
+sand. They breed in colonies. On the same islet are to be seen
+the eggs of the Indian river tern, the black-bellied tern, the
+swallow-plover, the spur-winged plover and the Indian skimmer.</p>
+
+<p>The eggs of all the above species are of similar appearance, the
+ground colour being greenish, or buff, or the hue of stone or
+cream, with reddish or brownish blotches. Three is the full
+complement of eggs. The bare white glittering sands on which
+these eggs are deposited are often at noon so hot as to be
+painful to touch; accordingly during the daytime there is no
+need for the birds to sit on the eggs in order to keep them
+warm. Indeed, it has always been a mystery to the writer why
+terns' eggs laid in March in northern India do not get cooked.
+Mr. A. J. Currie recently came across some eggs of the
+black-bellied tern that had had water sprinkled over them. He is
+of opinion that the incubating birds treat the eggs thus in
+order to prevent <a name="page58"></a>their getting sun-baked. This theory should be
+borne in mind by those who visit sandbanks in March. Whether it
+be true or not, there is certainly no need for the adult birds
+to keep the eggs warm in the daytime, and they spend much of
+their time in wheeling gracefully overhead or in sleeping on the
+sand. By nightfall all the eggs are covered by parent birds,
+which are said to sit so closely that it is possible to catch
+them by means of a butterfly net. The terns, although they do
+not sit much on their eggs during the day, ever keep a close
+watch on them, so that, when a human being lands on a nest-laden
+sandbank, the parent birds fly round his head, uttering loud
+screams.</p>
+
+<p>The swallow-plovers go farther. They become so excited that they
+flutter about on the sand, with dragging wings and limping legs,
+as if badly wounded. Sometimes they perform somersaults in their
+intense excitement. The nearer the intruder approaches their
+eggs the more vigorous do their antics become.</p>
+
+<p>Every lover of the winged folk should make a point of visiting,
+late in March or early in April, an islet on which these birds
+nest. He <a name="page59"></a>will find much to interest him there. In April many of
+the young birds will be hatched out. A baby tern is an amusing
+object. It is covered with soft sand-coloured down. When a human
+being approaches it crouches on the sand, half burying its head
+in its shoulders, and remains thus perfectly motionless. If
+picked up it usually remains limply in the hand, so that, but
+for its warmth, it might be deemed lifeless. After it has been
+set down again on the sand, it will remain motionless until the
+intruder's back is turned, when it will run to the water as fast
+as its little legs can carry it. It swims as easily as a duck.
+Needless to state, the parent birds make a great noise while
+their young are being handled.</p>
+
+<p>Birds decline to be fettered by the calendar. Many of the
+species which do not ordinarily nest until April or May
+occasionally begin operations in March, hence nests of the
+following species, which are dealt with next month, may occur in
+the present one:&mdash;the tree-pie, tailor-bird, common myna,
+bank-myna, brown rock-chat, brown-backed robin, pied wagtail,
+red-winged bush-lark, shikra, red-wattled lapwing,
+yellow-throated sparrow, bee-eater, blue rock-pigeon, green
+pigeon and grey partridge.</p>
+<a name="page60"></a>
+<p>March the 15th marks the beginning of the close season for game
+birds in all the reserved forests of Northern India. This is
+none too soon, as some individuals begin breeding at the end of
+the month.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page61"></a>
+<h3><a name="april">APRIL</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="april poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>The breeze moves slow with thick perfume<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From every mango grove;<br>
+ From coral tree to parrot bloom<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The black bees questing rove,<br>
+ The koil wakes the early dawn.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ W<small>ATERFIELD</small>. <i>I<small>ndian</small> B<small>allads</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The fifteenth of April marks the beginning of the "official" hot
+weather in the United Provinces; but the elements decline to
+conform to the rules of man. In the eastern and southern
+districts hot-weather conditions are established long before
+mid-April, while in the sub-Himalayan belt the temperature
+remains sufficiently low throughout the month to permit human
+beings to derive some physical enjoyment from existence. In that
+favoured tract the nights are usually clear and cool, so that it
+is very pleasant to sleep outside beneath the starry canopy of
+the heavens.</p>
+
+<p>It requires an optimist to say good things of April days, even
+in the sub-Himalayan tract. <a name="page62"></a>Fierce scorching west winds sweep
+over the earth, covering everything with dust. Sometimes the
+flying sand is so thick as to obscure the landscape, and often,
+after the wind has dropped, the particles remain suspended for
+days as a dust haze. The dust is a scourge. It is all-pervading.
+It enters eyes, ears, nose and mouth. To escape it is
+impossible. Closed doors and windows fail to keep it from
+entering the bungalow. The only creatures which appear to be
+indifferent to it are the fowls of the air. As to the heat, the
+non-migratory species positively revel in it. The crows and a
+few other birds certainly do gasp and pant when the sun is at
+its height, but even they, save for a short siesta at midday,
+are as active in April and May as schoolboys set free from a
+class-room. April is the month in which the spring crops are
+harvested. As soon as the <a href="#holi"><i>Holi</i></a> festival is over the
+cultivators issue forth in thousands, armed with sickles, and
+begin to reap. They are almost as active as the birds, but their
+activity is forced and not spontaneous; like most Anglo-Indian
+officials they literally earn their bread by the sweat of the
+brow. Thanks to their unceasing labours the countryside becomes
+transformed during the month; <a name="page63"></a>that which was a sea of smiling
+golden-brown wheat and barley becomes a waste of short stubble.</p>
+
+<p>Nature gives some compensation for the heat and the dust in the
+shape of mulberries, loquats, lichis and cool luscious papitas
+and melons which ripen in March or April. The mango blossom
+becomes transfigured into fruit, which, by the end of the month,
+is as large as an egg, and will be ready for gathering in the
+latter half of May.</p>
+
+<p>Many trees are in flower. The coral, the silk-cotton and the
+<i>dhak</i> are resplendent with red foliage. The <i>jhaman</i>, the
+<i>siris</i> and the <i>mohwa</i> are likewise in bloom and, ere the close
+of the month, the <i>amaltas</i> or Indian laburnum will put forth
+its bright yellow flowers in great profusion. Throughout April
+the air is heavy with the scent of blossoms. The <i>shesham</i>, the
+<i>sal</i>, the <i>pipal</i> and the <i>nim</i> are vivid with fresh foliage.
+But notwithstanding all this galaxy of colour, notwithstanding
+the brightness of the sun and the blueness of the sky, the
+countryside lacks the sweetness that Englishmen associate with
+springtime, because the majority of the trees, being evergreen,
+do not renew their clothing completely at this season, and <a name="page64"></a>the
+foliage is everywhere more or less obscured by the all-pervading
+dust.</p>
+
+<p>The great avian emigration, which began in March, now reaches
+its height. During the warm April nights millions of birds leave
+the plains of India. The few geese remaining at the close of
+March, depart in the first days of April.</p>
+
+<p>The brahminy ducks, which during the winter months were
+scattered in twos and threes over the lakes and rivers of
+Northern India, collect into flocks that migrate, one by one, to
+cooler climes, so that, by the end of the first week in May, the
+<i>a-onk</i> of these birds is no longer heard. The mallard, gadwall,
+widgeon, pintail, the various species of pochard and the common
+teal are rapidly disappearing. With April duck-shooting ends. Of
+the migratory species only a few shovellers and garganey teal
+tarry till May.</p>
+
+<p>The snipe and the quail are likewise flighting towards their
+breeding grounds. Thus on the 1st of May the avian population of
+India is less by many millions than it was at the beginning of
+April. But the birds that remain behind more than compensate us,
+by their great activity, for the loss of those that have
+<a name="page65"></a>departed. There is more to interest the ornithologist in April
+than there was in January.</p>
+
+<p>The bird chorus is now at its best. The magpie-robin is in full
+song. At earliest dawn he takes up a position on the topmost
+bough of a tree and pours forth his melody in a continuous
+stream. His varied notes are bright and joyous. Its voice is of
+wide compass and very powerful; were it a little softer in tone
+it would rival that of the nightingale. The magpie-robin is
+comparatively silent at noonday, but from sunset until dusk he
+sings continuously.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout April the little cock sunbirds deliver themselves of
+their vigorous canary-like song. The bulbuls tinkle as blithely
+as ever. Ioras, pied wagtails, pied chats, and wood-shrikes
+continue to contribute their not unworthy items to the
+minstrelsy of the Indian countryside. The robins, having by now
+found their true notes, are singing sweetly and softly. The
+white-eyes are no longer content to utter their usual cheeping
+call, the cocks give vent to an exquisite warble and thereby
+proclaim the advent of the nesting season. The <i>towee</i>, <i>towee</i>,
+<i>towee</i>, of the tailor-bird, <a name="page66"></a>more penetrating than melodious,
+grows daily more vigorous, reminding us that we may now
+hopefully search for his nest. Among the less pleasing sounds
+that fill the welkin are the <i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i> of the
+coppersmith, the <i>kutur</i>, <i>kutur</i>, <i>kuturuk</i> of the green
+barbet, and the calls of the various cuckoos that summer in the
+plains of Northern India. The calls of these cuckoos, although
+frequently heard in April, are uttered more continuously in May,
+accordingly they are described in the calendar for that month.</p>
+
+<p>The owls, of course, lift up their voices, particularly on
+moonlight nights. The nightjars are as vociferous as they were
+in March; their breeding season is now at its height.</p>
+
+<p>In the hills the woods resound with the cheerful double note of
+the European cuckoo (<i>Cuculus canorus</i>). This bird is
+occasionally heard in the plains of the Punjab in April, and
+again from July to September, when it no longer calls in the
+Himalayas. This fact, coupled with the records of the presence
+of the European cuckoo in Central India in June and July, lends
+support to the theory that the birds which enliven the Himalayas
+in spring <a name="page67"></a>go south in July and winter in the Central Provinces.
+Cuckoos, at seasons when they are silent, are apt to be
+overlooked, or mistaken for shikras.</p>
+
+<p>Ornithologists stationed in Central India will render a service
+to science if they keep a sharp look-out for European cuckoos
+and record the results of their observations. In this way alone
+can the above theory be proved or disproved.</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of the month most of the rollers have settled down
+to domestic duties, and in consequence are less noisy than they
+were when courting. Their irritating grating cries are now
+largely replaced by harsh <i>tshocks</i> of delight, each <i>tshock</i>
+being accompanied by a decisive movement of the tail. The cause
+of these interjections expressing delight is a clutch of white
+eggs or a brood of young birds, hidden in a hole in a tree or a
+building.</p>
+
+<p>April is a month in which the pulse of bird life beats very
+vigorously in India. He who, braving the heat, watches closely
+the doings of the feathered folk will be rewarded by the
+discovery of at least thirty different kinds of nests. Hence, it
+is evident that the calendar for this month, unless it is to
+attain very large <a name="page68"></a>dimensions, must be a mere catalogue of
+nesting species. The compiler of the calendar has to face an
+<i>embarrass de richesses</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Of the common species that build in March and the previous
+months the following are likely to be found with eggs or
+young&mdash;the jungle crows, sunbirds, doves, pied and golden-backed
+woodpeckers, coppersmiths, hoopoes, common and brahminy kites,
+bulbuls, shrikes, little minivets, fantail flycatchers,
+wire-tailed swallows, paroquets, spotted owlets, swifts,
+scavenger vultures, red-headed merlins, skylarks, crested larks,
+pipits, babblers, sand-martins, cliff-swallows, nuthatches,
+white-eyed buzzards, kites, black vultures, pied and
+white-breasted kingfishers, finch-larks, Indian wren-warblers,
+wood-shrikes, cuckoo-shrikes, green barbets, tawny eagles, and
+the terns and the other birds that nest on islets in rivers.
+Here and there may be seen a white-backed vulture's nest
+containing a young bird nearly ready to fly.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the middle of the month the long-tailed tree-pies
+(<i>Dendrocitta rufa</i>), which are nothing else than coloured
+crows, begin nest-building. They are to be numbered among the
+commonest birds in India, nevertheless their <a name="page69"></a>large open nests
+are rarely seen. The explanation of this phenomenon appears to
+be the fact that the nest is well concealed high up in a tree.
+Moreover, the pie, possessing a powerful beak which commands
+respect, is not obliged constantly to defend its home after the
+manner of small or excitable birds, and thus attract attention
+to it.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately for the tree-pie the kites and crows do not worry
+it. The shikra (<i>Astur badius</i>) and the white-eyed buzzard
+(<i>Butastur teesa</i>), which are now engaged in nest-building, are
+not so fortunate. The crows regard them as fair game, hence
+their nest-building season is a time of <i>sturm und drang</i>. They,
+in common with all diurnal birds of prey, build untidy nests in
+trees&mdash;mere conglomerations of sticks, devoid of any kind of
+architectural merit. The blue rock-pigeons (<i>Columba
+intermedia</i>) are busily prospecting for nesting sites. In some
+parts of India, especially in the Muttra and Fatehgarh
+districts, these birds nest chiefly in holes in wells. More
+often than not a stone thrown into a well in such a locality
+causes at least one pigeon to fly out of the well. In other
+places in India these birds build by preference on a ledge or a
+cornice inside some <a name="page70"></a>large building. They often breed in
+colonies. At Dig in Rajputana, where they are sacred in the eyes
+of Hindus, thousands of them nest in the fort, and, as Hume
+remarks, a gun fired in the moat towards evening raises a dense
+cloud of pigeons, "obscuring utterly the waning day and
+deafening one with the mighty rushing sound of countless strong
+and rapidly-plied pinions." According to Hume the breeding
+season for these birds in Upper India lasts from Christmas to
+May day. The experience of the writer is that April, May and
+June are the months in which to look for their nests. However,
+in justice to Hume, it must be said that recently Mr. A. J.
+Currie found a nest, containing eggs, in February.</p>
+
+<p>In April the green pigeons pair and build slender cradles, high
+up in mango trees, in which two white eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>The songster of the house-top&mdash;the brown rock-chat (<i>Cercomela
+fusca</i>)&mdash;makes sweet music throughout the month for the benefit
+of his spouse, who is incubating four pretty pale-blue eggs in a
+nest built on a ledge in an outhouse or on the sill of a
+clerestory window. This bird, which is thought by some to be a
+near relative of the sparrow of the Scriptures, <a name="page71"></a>is clothed in
+plain brown and seems to suffer from St. Vitus' dance in the
+tail. Doubtless it is often mistaken for a hen robin. For this
+mistake there is no excuse, because the rock-chat lacks the
+brick-red patch under the tail.</p>
+
+<p>April is the month in which to look for two exquisite little
+nests&mdash;those of the white-eye (<i>Zosterops palpebrosa</i>) and the
+iora (<i>Aegithina tiphia</i>). White-eyes are minute greenish-yellow
+birds with a conspicuous ring of white feathers round the eye.
+They go about in flocks. Each individual utters unceasingly a
+plaintive cheeping note by means of which it keeps its fellows
+apprised of its whereabouts. At the breeding season, that is to
+say in April and May, the cock sings an exceedingly sweet, but
+very soft, lay of six or seven notes. The nest is a cup, about
+2&frac12; inches in diameter and &frac34; of an inch in depth. It is
+usually suspended, like a hammock, from the fork of a branch;
+sometimes it is attached to the end of a single bough; it then
+looks like a ladle, the bough being the handle. It is composed
+of cobweb, roots, hair and other soft materials. Three or four
+tiny pale-blue eggs are laid.</p>
+<a name="page72"></a>
+<p>The iora is a feathered exquisite, about the size of a tomtit.
+The cock is arrayed in green, black and gold; his mate is gowned
+in green and yellow.</p>
+
+<p>The iora has a great variety of calls, of these a soft and
+rather plaintive long-drawn-out whistle is uttered most
+frequently in April and May.</p>
+
+<p>In shape and size the nest resembles an after-dinner coffee cup.
+It is beautifully woven, and, like those of the white-eye and
+fantail flycatcher, covered with cobweb; this gives it a very
+neat appearance. In it are laid two or three eggs of salmon hue
+with reddish-brown and purple-grey blotches.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout April the sprightly tailor-birds are busy with their
+nests. The tailor-bird (<i>Orthotomus sutorius</i>) is a wren with a
+long tail. In the breeding season the two median caudal feathers
+of the cock project as bristles beyond the others. The nest is a
+wonderful structure. Having selected a suitable place, which may
+be a bush in a garden or a pot plant in a verandah, the hen
+tailor-bird proceeds to make, with her sharp bill, a series of
+punctures along the margins of one or more leaves. The punctured
+edges are then drawn together, by means of <a name="page73"></a>strands of cobweb, to
+form a purse or pocket. When this has been done the frail bands
+of cobweb, which hold the edges of the leaves <i>in situ</i>, are
+strengthened by threads of cotton. Lastly, the purse is cosily
+lined with silk-cotton down or other soft material. Into the
+cradle, thus formed, three or four white eggs, speckled with
+red, find their way.</p>
+
+<p>In April cavities in trees and buildings suitable for nesting
+purposes are at a premium owing to the requirements of
+magpie-robins, brahminy mynas, common mynas, yellow-throated
+sparrows and rollers. Not uncommonly three or four pairs of
+birds nest in one weather-beaten old tree.</p>
+
+<p>Bank-mynas, white-breasted kingfishers, bee-eaters and a few
+belated sand-martins are nesting in sandbanks in cavities which
+they themselves have excavated. The nests of the kingfisher and
+the sand-martin have already been described, that of the
+bank-myna belongs to May rather than to April.</p>
+
+<p>Bee-eaters working at the nest present a pleasing spectacle. The
+sexes excavate turn about. The site chosen may be a bunker on
+the golf links, the butts on the rifle range, a low mud boundary
+between two fields, or any kind <a name="page74"></a>of bank. The sharp claws of the
+bee-eaters enable the birds to obtain a foothold on an almost
+vertical surface; this foothold is strengthened by the tail
+which, being stiff, acts as a third leg. In a surprisingly short
+time a cavity large enough to conceal the bird completely is
+formed. The bee-eater utilises the bill as pickaxe and the feet
+as ejectors. The little clouds of sand that issue at short
+intervals from each cavity afford evidence of the efficacy of
+these implements and the industry of those that use them.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the most charming birds in India are now occupied with
+family cares. These are both black-and-white birds&mdash;the
+magpie-robin (<i>Copsychus saularis</i>) and the pied wagtail
+(<i>Motacilla maderaspatensis</i>). The former has already been
+noticed as the best songster in the plains of India. The pattern
+of its plumage resembles that of the common magpie; this
+explains its English name. The hen is grey where the cock is
+black, otherwise there is no external difference between the
+sexes. For some weeks the cock has been singing lustily,
+especially in the early morning and late afternoon. In April he
+begins his courtship. His display is a simple affair&mdash;mere
+tail-play; the <a name="page75"></a>tail is expanded into a fan, so as to show the
+white outer feathers, then it is either raised and lowered
+alternately, or merely held depressed. Normally the tail is
+carried almost vertically. The nest is invariably placed in a
+cavity of a tree or a building.</p>
+
+<p>The pied wagtail always nests near water. If not on the ground,
+the nursery rests on some structure built by man.</p>
+
+<p>A visit to a bridge of boats in April is sure to reveal a nest
+of this charming bird. Hume records a case of a pair of pied
+wagtails nesting in a ferry-boat. This, it is true, was seldom
+used, but did occasionally cross the Jumna. On such occasions
+the hen would continue to sit, while the cock stood on the
+gunwale, pouring forth his sweet song, and made, from time to
+time, little sallies over the water after a flying gnat. Mr. A.
+J. Currie found at Lahore a nest of these wagtails in a
+ferry-boat in daily use; so that the birds must have selected
+the site and built the nest while the boat was passing to and
+fro across the river!</p>
+
+<p>Yet another black-and-white bird nests in April. This is the
+pied bush-chat (<i>Pratincola caprata</i>). The cock is black all
+over, save for <a name="page76"></a>a white patch on the rump and a bar of white in
+the wing. He delights to sit on a telegraph wire or a stem of
+elephant grass and there make cheerful melody. The hen is a dull
+reddish-grey bird. The nest is usually placed in a hole in the
+ground or a bank or a wall, sometimes it is wedged into a
+tussock of grass.</p>
+
+<p>Allied to the magpie-robin and the pied bush-chat is the
+familiar Indian robin (<i>Thamnobia cambayensis</i>), which, like its
+relatives, is now engaged in nesting operations. This species
+constructs its cup-shaped nest in all manner of strange places.
+Spaces in stacks of bricks, holes in the ground or in buildings,
+and window-sills are held in high esteem as nesting sites. The
+eggs are not easy to describe because they display great
+variation. The commonest type has a pale green shell, speckled
+with reddish-brown spots, which are most densely distributed at
+the thick end of the egg.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the grey partridges (<i>Francolinus pondicerianus</i>) are
+now nesting. This species is somewhat erratic in respect of its
+breeding season. Eggs have been taken in February, March, April,
+May, June, September, October, and November. The April eggs,
+however, outnumber those of all the other months put <a name="page77"></a>together.
+The nest is a shallow depression in the ground, lined with
+grass, usually under a bush. From six to nine cream-coloured
+eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>Another bird which is now incubating eggs on the ground is the
+did-he-do-it or red-wattled lapwing (<i>Sarcogrammus indicus</i>).
+The curious call, from which this plover derives its popular
+name, is familiar to every resident in India. This species nests
+between March and August. The 122 eggs in the possession of Hume
+were taken, 12 in March, 46 in April, 24 in May, 26 in June, 4
+in July, and 8 in August. Generally in a slight depression on
+the ground, occasionally on the ballast of a rail-road, four
+pegtop-shaped eggs are laid; these are, invariably, placed in
+the form of a cross, so that they touch each other at their thin
+ends. They are coloured like those of the common plover. The
+yellow-wattled lapwing (<i>Sarciophorus malabaricus</i>), which
+resembles its cousin in manners and appearance, nests in April,
+May and June.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season of the various species of sand-grouse that
+breed in India is now beginning. These birds, like lapwings, lay
+their eggs on the ground.</p>
+<a name="page78"></a>
+<p>In April one may come across an occasional nest of the pied
+starling, the king-crow, the paradise flycatcher, the grey
+hornbill, and the oriole, but these are exceptions. The birds in
+question do not as a rule begin to nest until May, and their
+doings accordingly are chronicled in the calendar for that
+month.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page79"></a>
+<h3><a name="may">MAY</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="may1 poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>The melancholy days are come, the saddest of the year.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ <i>T<small>he</small> M<small>instrelsy of the</small> W<small>oods</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<table width="100%" summary="may2 poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>Low from the brink the waters shrink;<br>
+ The deer all snuff for rain;<br>
+ The panting cattle search for drink<br>
+ Cracked glebe and dusty plain;<br>
+ The whirlwind, like a furnace blast,<br>
+ Sweeps clouds of darkening sand.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ W<small>ATERFIELD</small>. <i>I<small>ndian</small> B<small>allads</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<table width="100%" summary="may3 poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>Now the burning summer sun<br>
+ Hath unchalleng'd empire won<br>
+ And the scorching winds blow free,<br>
+ Blighting every herb and tree.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ R. T. H. G<small>RIFFITH.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>May in the plains of India! What unpleasant memories it recalls!
+Stifling nights in which sleep comes with halting steps and
+departs leaving us unrefreshed. Long, dreary days beneath the
+punkah in a closed bungalow which has ceased to be enlivened by
+the voices of the children and the patter of their little feet.
+Hot drives to office, under a brazen sky <a name="page80"></a>from which the sun
+shines with pitiless power, in the teeth of winds that scorch
+the face and fill the eyes with dust.</p>
+
+<p>It is in this month of May that the European condemned to
+existence in the plains echoes the cry of the psalmist: "Oh that
+I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away, and be at
+rest"&mdash;in the Himalayas. There would I lie beneath the deodars
+and, soothed by the rustle of their wind-caressed branches,
+drink in the pure cool air and listen to the cheerful double
+note of the cuckoo. The country-side in the plains presents a
+sorry spectacle. The gardens that had some beauty in the cold
+weather now display the abomination of desolation&mdash;a waste of
+shrivelled flowers, killed by the relentless sun. The spring
+crops have all been cut and the whole earth is dusty brown save
+for a few patches of young sugar-cane and the dust-covered
+verdure of the mango <a href="#tope">topes</a>. It is true that the gold-mohur trees
+and the Indian laburnums are in full flower and the air is
+heavily laden with the strong scent of the <i>nim</i> blossoms, but
+the heat is so intense that the European is able to enjoy these
+gifts of nature only at dawn. Nor has the ripening jack-fruit
+any attractions for him. He is <a name="page81"></a>repelled by its overpowering
+scent and sickly flavour. Fortunately the tastes of all men are
+not alike. In the eyes of the Indian this fruit is a dish fit to
+be set before the gods. The <i>pipal</i> trees, which are covered
+with tender young leaves, now offer to the birds a feast in the
+form of numbers of figs, no larger than cranberries. This
+generous offer is greedily accepted by green pigeons, mynas and
+many other birds which partake with right goodwill and make much
+noise between the courses. No matter how intense the heat be,
+the patient cultivator issues forth with his cattle before
+sunrise and works at his threshing floor until ten o'clock, then
+he seeks the comparative coolness of the mango tope and sleeps
+until the sun is well on its way to the western horizon, when he
+resumes the threshing of the corn, not ceasing until the shades
+of night begin to steal over the land.</p>
+
+<p>The birds do not object to the heat. They revel in it. It is
+true that in the middle of the day even they seek some shady
+tree in which to enjoy a siesta and await the abatement of the
+heat of the blast furnace in which they live, move and have
+their being. The long day, which begins for them before 4 a.m.,
+rather <a name="page82"></a>than the intense heat, appears to be the cause of this
+midday sleep. Except during this period of rest at noon the
+birds are more lively than they were in April.</p>
+
+<p>The breeding season is now at its height. In May over five
+hundred species of birds nest in India. No individual is likely
+to come across all these different kinds of nests, because, in
+order to do so, that person would have to traverse India from
+Peshawar to Tinnevelly and from Quetta to Tenasserim.
+Nevertheless, the man who remains in one station, if he choose
+to put forth a little energy and defy the sun, may reasonably
+expect to find the nests of more than fifty kinds of birds.
+Whether he be energetic or the reverse he cannot fail to hear a
+great many avian sounds both by day and by night. In May the
+birds are more vociferous than at any other time of year. The
+fluty cries of the koel and the vigorous screams of the
+brain-fever bird penetrate the closed doors of the bungalow, as
+do, to a less extent, the chatter of the seven sisters, the
+calls of the mynas, the <i>towee</i>, <i>towee</i>, <i>towee</i> of the
+tailor-bird, the <i>whoot</i>, <i>whoot</i>, <i>whoot</i> of the crow-pheasant,
+the monotonous notes of the coppersmith and the green barbet,
+the <i>uk</i>, <i>uk</i>, <a name="page83"></a><i>uk</i> of the hoopoe, the cheerful music of the
+fantail flycatcher, the three sweet syllables of the iora&mdash;<i>so
+be ye</i>, the <i>tee</i>, <i>tee</i>, <i>tee</i>, <i>tee</i> of the nuthatch, the
+liquid whistle of the oriole and, last but not least, the melody
+of the magpie-robin. The calls of the hoopoe and nuthatch become
+less frequent as the month draws to a close; on the other hand,
+the melody of the oriole gains in strength.</p>
+
+<p>As likely as not a pair of blue jays has elected to rear a brood
+of young hopefuls in the chimney or in a hole in the roof. When
+this happens the human occupant of the bungalow is apt to be
+driven nearly to distraction by the cries of the young birds,
+which resemble those of some creature in distress, and are
+uttered with "damnable reiteration."</p>
+
+<p>All these sounds, however, reach in muffled form the ear of a
+human being shut up in a bungalow; hence it is the voices of the
+night rather than those of the day with which May in India is
+associated. Most people sleep out of doors at this season, and,
+as the excessive heat makes them restless, they have ample
+opportunity of listening to the nightly concert of the feathered
+folk. The most notable performers are the cuckoos. These birds
+are <a name="page84"></a>fully as nocturnal as the owls. The brain-fever bird
+(<i>Hierococcyx varius</i>) is now in full voice, and may be heard,
+both by day and by night, in all parts of Northern India, east
+of Umballa. This creature has two calls. One is the eternal
+"brain-fever, <i>brain-fever</i>, BRAIN-FEVER," each "brain-fever"
+being louder and pitched in a higher key than the previous one,
+until the bird reaches its top note. The other call consists of
+a volley of descending notes, uttered as if the bird were
+unwinding its voice after the screams of "brain-fever." The next
+cuckoo is not one whit less vociferous than the last. It is
+known as the Indian koel (<i>Eudynamis honorata</i>). This noble fowl
+has three calls, and it would puzzle anyone to say which is the
+most powerful. The usual cry is a crescendo <i>ku-il</i>, <i>ku-il</i>,
+<i>ku-il</i>, which to Indian ears is very sweet-sounding. Most
+Europeans are agreed that it is a sound of which one can have
+too much. The second note is a mighty avalanche of yells and
+screams, which Cunningham has syllabised as <i>K&uacute;k</i>, <i>kuu</i>, <i>kuu</i>,
+<i>kuu</i>, <i>kuu</i>, <i>kuu</i>. The third cry, which is uttered only
+occasionally, is a number of shrill shrieks: <i>Hekaree</i>, <i>karee</i>,
+<i>karee</i>, <i>karee</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The voice of the koel is heard throughout the <a name="page85"></a>hours of light and
+darkness in May, so that one wonders whether this bird ever
+sleeps. The second call is usually reserved for dawn, when the
+bird is most vociferous. This cry is particularly exasperating
+to Europeans, since it often awakens them rudely from the only
+refreshing sleep they have enjoyed, namely, that obtained at the
+time when the temperature is comparatively low. The koel extends
+into the Punjab and is heard throughout Northern India.</p>
+
+<p>The third of the cuckoos which enlivens the hot weather in the
+plains is the Indian cuckoo (<i>Cuculus micropterus</i>). This
+species dwells chiefly in the Himalayas, but late in April or
+early in May certain individuals seek the hot plains and remain
+there for some months. They do not extend very far into the
+peninsula, being numerous only in the sub-Himalayan tracts as
+far south as Fyzabad. The call of this cuckoo is melodious and
+easily recognised. Indians represent it as <i>Bouto-taku</i>, while
+some Englishmen maintain that the bird says "I've lost my love."
+To the writer's mind the cry is best represented by the words
+<i>wherefore</i>, <i>wherefore</i>, repeated with musical cadence. This
+bird does not usually call much during the day. <a name="page86"></a>It uplifts its
+voice about two hours before sunset and continues calling
+intermittently until some time after sunrise. The note is often
+uttered while the bird is on the wing.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely less vociferous than the cuckoos are the owls. Needless
+to state that the tiny spotted owlets make a great noise in May.
+They are loquacious throughout the year, especially on moonlight
+nights. Nor do they wait for the setting of the sun until they
+commence to pour forth what Eha terms a "torrent of squeak and
+chatter and gibberish."</p>
+
+<p>Almost as abundant as the spotted owlet is the jungle owlet
+(<i>Glaucidium radiatum</i>). This species, like the last-mentioned,
+does not confine its vocal efforts to the hot weather. It is
+vociferous throughout the year; however, special mention must be
+made of it in connection with the month of May, because it is
+not until a human being sleeps out of doors that he takes much
+notice of the bird.</p>
+
+<p>The note of this owl is very striking. It may be likened to the
+noise made by a motor cycle when it is being started. It
+consists of a series of dissyllables, low at first with a pause
+after each, but gradually growing in intensity and succeeding
+one another at shorter intervals, <a name="page87"></a>until the bird seems to have
+got fairly into its stride, when it pulls up with dramatic
+suddenness. Tickell thus syllabises its call: <i>Turtuck</i>,
+<i>turtuck</i>, <i>turtuck</i>, <i>turtuck</i>, <i>turtuck</i>, <i>tukatu</i>,
+<i>chatatuck</i>, <i>atuckatuck</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Another sound familiar to those who sleep out of doors at this
+season is a low, soft "what," repeated at intervals of about a
+minute.</p>
+
+<p>The writer ascribes this call to the collared scops owl (<i>Scops
+bakkamoena</i>). Mr. A. J. Currie, however, asserts that the note
+in question is that emitted by spotted owlets (<i>Athene brama</i>)
+when they have young. He states that he has been quite close to
+the bird when it was calling.</p>
+
+<p>A little patient observation will suffice to decide the point at
+issue.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to distinguish between the two owls, as the scops has
+aigrettes or "horns," which the spotted owlet lacks.</p>
+
+<p>The nightjars help to swell the nocturnal chorus. There are
+seven or eight different species in India, but of these only
+three are commonly heard and two of them occur mainly in forest
+tracts. The call of the most widely-distributed of the Indian
+goatsuckers&mdash;<a name="page88"></a><i>Caprimulgus asiaticus</i>, the common Indian
+nightjar&mdash;is like unto the sound made by a stone skimming over ice.
+Horsfield's goatsucker is a very vociferous bird. From March
+till June it is heard wherever there are forests. As soon as the
+shadows of the evening begin to steal across the sky its loud
+<i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i> cleaves the air for
+minutes together. This call to some extent replaces by night the
+<i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i> of the coppersmith, which is uttered so
+persistently in the day-time. In addition to this note
+Horsfield's nightjar emits a low soft <i>chur</i>, <i>chur</i>, <i>chur</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The third nightjar, which also is confined chiefly to forest
+tracts, is known as Franklin's nightjar (<i>C. monticolus</i>). This
+utters a harsh <i>tweet</i> which at a distance might pass for the
+chirp of a canary with a sore throat.</p>
+
+<p>Other sounds heard at night-time are the plaintive <i>did-he-do-it
+pity-to-do-it</i> of the red-wattled lapwing (<i>Sarcogrammus
+indicus</i>), and the shrill calls of other plovers.</p>
+
+<p>As has already been said, the nesting season is at its height in
+May. With the exception of the paroquets, spotted owlets,
+nuthatches, black vultures and pied kingfishers, which have
+completed nesting operations for the year, and <a name="page89"></a>the golden-backed
+woodpeckers and the cliff-swallows, which have reared up their
+first broods, the great majority of the birds mentioned as
+having nests or young in March or April are still busily
+occupied with domestic cares.</p>
+
+<p>May marks the close of the usual breeding season for the jungle
+crows, skylarks, crested larks, finch-larks, wood-shrikes,
+yellow-throated sparrows, sand-martins, pied wagtails, green
+barbets, coppersmiths, rollers, green bee-eaters, white-breasted
+kingfishers, scavenger vultures, tawny eagles, kites, shikras,
+spur-winged plovers, little ringed plovers, pied woodpeckers,
+night herons and pied chats. In the case of the tree-pies,
+cuckoo-shrikes, seven sisters, bank-mynas and blue-tailed
+bee-eaters the nesting season is now at its height. All the
+following birds are likely to have either eggs or nestlings in
+May: the white-eyes, ioras, bulbuls, tailor-birds, shrikes,
+brown rock-chats, Indian robins, magpie-robins, sunbirds,
+swifts, nightjars, white-eyed buzzards, hoopoes, green pigeons,
+blue rock-pigeons, doves, sparrows, the red and yellow wattled
+lapwings, minivets, wire-tailed swallows, red-headed merlins,
+fantail flycatchers, pipits, sand-grouse and grey <a name="page90"></a>partridges.
+The nests of most of these have been described already.</p>
+
+<p>In the present month several species begin nesting operations.
+First and foremost among these is the king-crow or black drongo
+(<i>Dicrurus ater</i>). No bird, not even the roller, makes so much
+ado about courtship and nesting as does the king-crow, of which
+the love-making was described last month. A pair of king-crows
+regards as its castle the tree in which it has elected to
+construct a nest. Round this tree it establishes a sphere of
+influence into which none but a favoured few birds may come. All
+intruders are forthwith set upon by the pair of little furies,
+and no sight is commoner at this season than that of a crow, a
+kite, or a hawk being chased by two irate drongos. The nest of
+the king-crow is a small cup, wedged into the fork of a branch
+high up in a tree.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian oriole (<i>Oriolus kundoo</i>) is one of the privileged
+creatures allowed to enter the dicrurian sphere of influence,
+and it takes full advantage of this privilege by placing its
+nest almost invariably in the same tree as that of the
+king-crow. The oriole is a timid bird and is glad to rear up its
+family under the &aelig;gis of so doughty a warrior as the Black
+Prince of <a name="page91"></a>the Birds. The nest of the oriole is a wonderful
+structure. Having selected a fork in a suitable branch, the
+nesting bird tears off a long strip of soft pliable bark,
+usually that of the mulberry tree. It proceeds to wind one end
+of this strip round a limb of the forked branch, then the other
+end is similarly bound to the other limb. A second and a third
+strip of bark are thus dealt with, and in this manner a cradle
+or hammock is formed. On it a slender cup-shaped nest is
+superimposed. This is composed of grasses and fibres, some of
+which are wound round the limbs of the forked branch, while
+others are made fast to the strands of bark. The completed nest
+is nearly five inches in diameter. From below it looks like a
+ball of dried grass wedged into the forked branch.</p>
+
+<p>The oriole lays from two to four white eggs spotted with dull
+red. The spots can be washed off by water; sometimes their
+colour "runs" while they are in the nest, thereby imparting a
+pink hue to the whole shell. Both sexes take part in nest
+construction, but the hen alone appears to incubate. She is a
+very shy creature, and is rarely discovered actually sitting,
+because she leaves the nest with a little <a name="page92"></a>cry of alarm at the
+first sound of a human footfall.</p>
+
+<p>May and June are the months in which to look for the nests of
+that superb bird&mdash;the paradise flycatcher (<i>Terpsiphone
+paradisi</i>). This is known as the rocket-bird or ribbon-bird
+because of the two long fluttering tail feathers possessed by
+the cock. The hen has the appearance of a kind of bulbul, being
+chestnut-hued with a white breast and a metallic blue-black
+crest. For the first year of their existence the young cocks
+resemble the hens in appearance. Then the long tail feathers
+appear. In his third year the cock turns white save for the
+black-crested head. This species spends the winter in South
+India. In April it migrates northwards to summer in the shady
+parts of the plains of Bengal, the United Provinces and the
+Punjab, and on the lower slopes of the Himalayas. The nest is a
+deep, untidy-looking cup, having the shape of an inverted cone.
+It is always completely covered with cocoons and cobweb. It is
+usually attached to one or more of the lower branches of a tree.
+Both sexes work at the nest and take part in incubation. The
+long tail feathers of the sitting cock hang down from the nest
+like red or white satin <a name="page93"></a>streamers according to the phase of his
+plumage. In the breeding season the cock sings a sweet little
+lay&mdash;an abridged version of that of the fantail flycatcher. When
+alarmed both the cock and the hen utter a sharp <i>tschit</i>.</p>
+
+<p>May is perhaps the proper month in which to describe the nesting
+of the various species of myna.</p>
+
+<p>According to Hume the normal breeding season of the common myna
+(<i>Acridotheres tristis</i>) lasts from June to August, during which
+period two broods are reared. This is not correct. The nesting
+season of this species begins long before June. The writer has
+repeatedly seen mynas carrying twigs and feathers in March, and
+has come across nests containing eggs or young birds in both
+April and May. June perhaps is the month in which the largest
+numbers of nests are seen. The cradle of the common myna is
+devoid of architectural merit. It is a mere conglomeration of
+twigs, grass, rags, bits of paper and other oddments. The
+nesting material is dropped haphazard into a hole in a tree or
+building, or even on to a ledge in a verandah. Four beautiful
+blue eggs are laid.</p>
+<a name="page94"></a>
+<p>At Peshawar Mr. A. J. Currie once found four myna's eggs in a
+deserted crows' nest in a tree.</p>
+
+<p>As has already been stated, the nest of the bank-myna (<i>A.
+ginginianus</i>) is built in a hole in a well, a sandbank, or a
+cliff. The birds breed in colonies; each pair excavates its own
+nest by means of beak and claw. Into the holes dug out in this
+manner the miscellaneous nesting materials are dropped pell-mell
+after the manner of all mynas. The breeding season of this
+species lasts from April to July, May being the month in which
+most eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>The black-headed or brahminy myna (<i>Temenuchus pagodarum</i>)
+usually begins nesting operations about a month later than the
+bank-myna; its eggs are most often taken in June. The nest,
+which is an untidy, odoriferous collection of rubbish, is always
+in a cavity. In Northern India a hole in a tree is usually
+selected; in the South buildings are largely patronised. Some
+years ago the writer observed a pair of these birds building a
+nest in a hole made in the masonry for the passage of the
+lightning conductor of the Church in Fort St. George, Madras.</p>
+
+<p>May marks the commencement of the breeding season of the pied
+starlings (<i>Sturnopastor <a name="page95"></a>contra</i>). In this month they begin to
+give vent with vigour to their cheerful call, which is so
+pleasing as almost to merit the name of song.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the rains they continue to make a joyful noise. Not
+that they are silent at other seasons; they call throughout the
+year, but, except at the breeding period, their voices are
+comparatively subdued.</p>
+
+<p>The nest is a bulky, untidy mass of straw, roots, twigs, rags,
+feathers and such-like things. It is placed fairly low down in a
+tree.</p>
+
+<p>Many of these nests are to be seen in May, but the breeding
+season is at its height in June and July.</p>
+
+<p>The grey hornbills (<i>Lophoceros birostris</i>) are now seeking out
+holes in which to deposit their eggs. The hen, after having laid
+the first egg, does not emerge from the nest till the young are
+ready to fly. During the whole of this period she is kept a
+close prisoner, the aperture to the nest cavity having been
+closed by her mate and herself with their own droppings, a small
+chink alone being left through which she is able to insert her
+beak in order to receive the food brought to her by the cock.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. A. J. Currie gives an interesting account <a name="page96"></a>of a grey
+hornbill's nest he discovered at Lahore in 1910. About the
+middle of April he noticed a pair of paroquets nesting in a hole
+in a tree. On April 28th he saw a hornbill inspecting the hole,
+regardless of the noisy protests of the paroquets. On the 30th
+he observed that the hole had become smaller, and suspected that
+the hornbills had taken possession. On May 1st all that was left
+of the hole was a slit. On May 6th Mr. Currie watched the cock
+hornbill feeding the hen. First the male bird came carrying a
+fig in his bill. Seeing human beings near the nest, he did not
+give the fig to the hen but swallowed it and flew off. Presently
+the cock reappeared with a fig which he put into the slit in the
+plastering; after he had parted with the fig he began to feed
+the hen by bringing up food from his crop. During the process
+the beak of the hen did not appear at the slit.</p>
+
+<p>On May 7th Mr. Currie opened out the nest. The hole was sixteen
+feet from the ground and the orifice had a diameter of three
+inches; all of this except a slit, broadest at the lower part,
+was filled up by plaster. This plaster was odourless and
+contained embedded in it a number of fig seeds.</p>
+<a name="page97"></a>
+<p>The nest hole was capacious, its dimensions being roughly 1 foot
+by 1 foot by 2 feet. From the bottom five handfuls of pieces of
+dry bark were extracted. Three white eggs were found lying on
+these pieces of bark. The sitting hen resented the
+"nest-breaking," and, having pecked viciously at the intruder,
+tried to escape by climbing up to the top of the nest hole. She
+was dragged out of her retreat by the beak, after an attempt to
+pull her out by the tail had resulted in all her tail feathers
+coming away in her captor's hand!</p>
+
+<p>The young green parrots have all left their nests and are flying
+about in noisy flocks. They may be distinguished from the adults
+by the short tail and comparatively soft call.</p>
+
+<p>Most pairs of hoopoes are now accompanied by at least one young
+bird which is almost indistinguishable from the adults. The
+young birds receive, with squeaks of delight, the grubs or
+caterpillars proffered by the parents. Occasionally a pair of
+hoopoes may be seen going through the antics of courtship
+preparatory to raising a second brood.</p>
+
+<p>In scrub-jungle parties of partridges, consisting of father,
+mother and five or six little chicks, wander about.</p>
+<a name="page98"></a>
+<p>As the shades of night begin to fall family parties of spotted
+owlets issue from holes in trees or buildings. The baby birds
+squat on the ground in silence, while the parents make sallies
+into the air after flying insects which they bring to the young
+birds.</p>
+
+<p>The peafowl and sarus cranes are indulging in the pleasures of
+courtship. The young cranes, that were hatched out in the
+monsoon of last year, are now nearly as big as their parents,
+and are well able to look after themselves; ere long they will
+be driven away and made to do so. The display of the sarus is
+not an elaborate process. The cock turns his back on the hen and
+then partially opens his wings, so that the blackish primaries
+droop and the grey secondary feathers are arched. In this
+attitude he trumpets softly.</p>
+
+<p>The water-hens have already begun their uproarious courtship.
+Their weird calls must be heard to be appreciated. They consist
+of series of <i>kok</i>, <i>koks</i> followed by roars, hiccups, cackles
+and gurgles.</p>
+
+<p>Black partridges, likewise, are very noisy throughout the month
+of May. Their nesting season is fast approaching.</p>
+
+<p>Even as April showers in England bring <a name="page99"></a>forth May flowers, so
+does the April sunshine in India draw forth the marriage
+adornments of the birds that breed in the rains. The
+pheasant-tailed jacanas are acquiring the long tail feathers
+that form the wedding ornaments of both sexes.</p>
+
+<p>The various species of egret and the paddy bird all assume their
+nuptial plumes in May.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of the egret these plumes are in great demand and
+are known to the plumage trade as "ospreys."</p>
+
+<p>The plumes in question consist of long filamentous feathers that
+grow from the neck of the egret and also from its breast. In
+most countries those who obtain these plumes wait until the
+birds are actually nesting before attempting to secure them,
+taking advantage of the fact that egrets nest in colonies and of
+the parental affection of the breeding birds. A few men armed
+with guns are able to shoot every adult member of the colony,
+because the egrets continue to feed their young until they are
+shot. As the plumes of these birds are worth nearly their weight
+in gold, egrets have become extinct in some parts of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The export of plumage from India is unlawful, but this fact does
+not prevent a very <a name="page100"></a>large feather trade being carried on, since
+it is not difficult to smuggle "ospreys" out of the country.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless the existing Notification of the Government of India,
+prohibiting the export of plumage, has the effect of checking,
+to some extent, the destruction of egrets, but there is no
+denying the fact that many of the larger species are still shot
+for their plumes while breeding.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of cattle-egrets (<i>Bubulcus coromandus</i>) the custom
+of shooting them when on the nest has given place to a more
+humane and more sensible method of obtaining their nuchal
+plumes. These, as we have seen, arise early in May, but the
+birds do not begin to nest until the end of June. The
+cattle-egret is gregarious; it is the large white bird that
+accompanies cattle in order to secure the insects put up by the
+grazing quadrupeds. Taking advantage of the social habits of
+these egrets the plume-hunters issue forth early in May and
+betake themselves, in parties of five or six, to the villages
+where the birds roost. Their apparatus consists of two nets,
+each some eight feet long and three broad. These are laid flat
+on the ground in shallow water, <a name="page101"></a>parallel to one another, about a
+yard apart. The inner side of each net is securely pegged to the
+ground. By an ingenious arrangement of sticks and ropes a man,
+taking cover at a distance of twenty or thirty yards, by giving
+a sharp pull at a pliable cane, can cause the outer parts of
+each net to spring up and meet to form an enclosure which is, in
+shape, not unlike a sleeping-pal tent. When the nets have been
+set in a pond near the trees where the cattle-egrets roost at
+night and rest in the day-time, two or three decoy
+birds&mdash;captured egrets with their eyes sewn up to prevent them
+struggling or trying to fly away&mdash;are tethered in the space
+between the two nets; these last, being laid flat under muddy
+water, are invisible. Sooner or later an egret in one of the
+trees near by, seeing some of its kind standing peacefully in
+the water, alights near them. Almost before it has touched the
+ground the cane is pulled and the egret finds itself a prisoner.
+One of the bird-catchers immediately runs to the net, secures
+the victim, opens out its wings, and, holding each of these
+between the big and the second toe, pulls out the nuchal plumes.
+This operation lasts about five seconds. The bird is then set at
+liberty, <a name="page102"></a>far more astonished than hurt. It betakes itself to its
+wild companions, and the net is again set. Presently another
+egret is caught and divested of its plumes, and the process
+continues all day.</p>
+
+<p>The bird-catchers spend six weeks every year in obtaining
+cattle-egret plumes in this manner. They sell the plumes to
+middle-men, who dispose of them to those who smuggle them out of
+India.</p>
+
+<p>If stuffed birds were used as decoys and the plumes of the
+captured birds were snipped off with scissors instead of being
+pulled out, the operation could be carried on without any
+cruelty, and, if legalised and supervised by the Government, it
+could be made a source of considerable revenue.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page103"></a>
+<h3><a name="june">JUNE</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="june1 poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>'Tis raging noon; and, vertical, the sun<br>
+ Darts on the head direct his forceful rays;<br>
+ O'er heaven and earth, far as the ranging eye<br>
+ Can sweep, a dazzling deluge reigns; and all<br>
+ From pole to pole is undistinguish'd blaze.<br>
+ <br>
+ *
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*<br>
+ <br>
+ All-conquering heat, oh, intermit thy wrath,<br>
+ And on my throbbing temples potent thus<br>
+ Beam not so fierce! incessant still you flow,<br>
+ And still another fervent flood succeeds.<br>
+ Pour'd on the head profuse. In vain I sigh,<br>
+ <br>
+ *
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*<br>
+ <br>
+ Thrice happy he who on the sunless side<br>
+ Of a romantic mountain, forest crown'd<br>
+ Beneath the whole collected shade reclines.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ J. T<small>HOMSON</small>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<table width="100%" summary="june2 poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>With dancing feet glad peafowl greet<br>
+ Bright flash and rumbling cloud;<br>
+ Down channels steep red torrents sweep;<br>
+ The frogs give welcome loud;<br>
+ <br>
+ *
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*<br>
+ <br>
+ No stars in skies, but lantern-flies<br>
+ Seem stars that float to earth.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ W<small>ATERFIELD</small>. <i>I<small>ndian</small> B<small>allads</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>There are two Indian Junes&mdash;the June of fiction and the June of
+fact. The June of fiction is divided into two equal parts&mdash;the
+<a name="page104"></a>dry half and the wet half. The former is made up of hot days,
+dull with dust haze, when the shade temperature may reach 118&deg;,
+and of oppressive nights when the air is still and
+stagnant and the mercury in the thermometer rarely falls below
+84&deg;. Each succeeding period of four-and-twenty hours
+seems more disagreeable and unbearable than its predecessor,
+until the climax is reached about the 15th June, when large
+black clouds appear on the horizon and roll slowly onwards,
+accompanied by vivid lightning, loud peals of thunder and
+torrential rain. In the June of fact practically the whole month
+is composed of hot, dry, dusty, oppressive days; for the monsoon
+rarely reaches Northern India before the last week of the month
+and often tarries till the middle of July, or even later.</p>
+
+<p>The first rain causes the temperature to fall immediately. It is
+no uncommon thing for the mercury in the thermometer to sink 20
+degrees in a few minutes. While the rain is actually descending
+the weather feels refreshingly cool in contrast to the previous
+furnace-like heat. Small wonder then that the advent of the
+creative monsoon is more heartily welcomed in India than is
+spring in <a name="page105"></a>England. No sound is more pleasing to the human ear
+than the drumming of the first monsoon rain.</p>
+
+<p>But alas! the physical relief brought by the monsoon is only
+temporary. The temperature rises the moment the rain ceases to
+fall, and the prolonged breaks in the rains that occur every
+year render the last state of the climate worse than the first.
+The air is so charged with moisture that it cannot absorb the
+perspiration that emanates from the bodies of the human beings
+condemned to existence in this humid Inferno. For weeks together
+we live in a vapour-bath, and to the physical discomfort of
+perpetual clamminess is added the irritation of prickly heat.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, the rain brings with it myriads of torments in the
+form of termites, beetles, stinking bugs, flies, mosquitoes and
+other creeping and flying things, which bite and tease and find
+their way into every article of food and drink. The rain also
+awakens from their slumbers the frogs that have hibernated and
+&aelig;stivated in the sun-baked beds of dried-up ditches and tanks.
+These awakened amphibia fill the welkin with their croakings,
+which take the place of the avian chorus at <a name="page106"></a>night. The latter
+ceases with dramatic abruptness with the first fall of monsoon
+rain. During the monsoon the silence of the night is broken only
+by the sound of falling raindrops, or the croaking of the frogs,
+the stridulation of crickets innumerable, and the owlet's feeble
+call. Before the coming of the monsoon the diurnal chorus of the
+day birds begins to flag because the nesting season for many
+species is drawing to a close. The magpie-robin still pours
+forth his splendid song, but the quality of the music in the
+case of many individuals is already beginning to fall off. The
+rollers, which are feeding their young, are far less noisy than
+they were at the time of courtship. The barbets and
+coppersmiths, although not so vociferous as formerly, cannot,
+even in the monsoon, be charged with hiding their lights under a
+bushel. Towards the end of June the <i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i>,
+<i>chuk</i>, <i>chuk</i> of Horsfield's nightjar is not often heard, but
+the bird continues to utter its soft churring note. The iora's
+cheerful calls still resound through the shady mango <a href="#tope">tope</a>. The
+sunbirds, the fantail flycatchers, the orioles, the
+golden-backed woodpeckers, the white-breasted kingfishers and
+the <a name="page107"></a>black partridges call as lustily as ever, and the bulbuls
+continue to twitter to one another "stick to it!" With the first
+fall of rain the tunes of the paradise flycatchers and the
+king-crows change. The former now cry "Witty-ready wit," softly
+and gently, while the calls of the latter suddenly become sweet
+and mellow.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking generally, the monsoon seems to exercise a sobering, a
+softening influence on the voices of the birds. The pied myna
+forms the one exception; he does not come into his full voice
+until the rains have set in.</p>
+
+<p>The monsoon transfigures the earth. The brown, dry, hard
+countryside, with its dust-covered trees, becomes for the time
+being a shallow lake in which are studded emerald islets
+innumerable. Stimulated by the rain many trees put forth fresh
+crops of leaves. At the first break in the downpour the
+cultivators rush forth with their ploughs and oxen to prepare
+the soil for the autumn crops with all the speed they may.</p>
+
+<p>There is much to interest the ornithologist in June.</p>
+
+<p>Of the birds whose nests have been previously described the
+following are likely to <a name="page108"></a>have eggs or young: white-eyes, ioras,
+tailor-birds, king-crows, robins, sparrows, tree-pies, seven
+sisters, cuckoo-shrikes, Indian wren-warblers (second brood),
+sunbirds (second brood), swifts, fantail flycatchers (second
+brood), orioles, paradise flycatchers, grey horn-bills, and the
+various mynas, bulbuls, butcher-birds, doves, pigeons and
+lapwings. The following species have young which either are in
+the nest or have only recently left it: roller, hoopoe, brown
+rock-chat, magpie-robin, coppersmith, green barbet, nightjar,
+white-eyed buzzard, pipit, wire-tailed swallow, white-breasted
+kingfisher, grey partridge, kite, golden-backed woodpecker
+(second brood), and the several species of bee-eater and lark.</p>
+
+<p>With June the breeding season for the blue rock and green
+pigeons ends. In the <i>sal</i> forests the young jungle-fowl have
+now mostly hatched out and are following the old hens, or
+feeding independently.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the minivets are beginning to busy themselves with a
+second brood.</p>
+
+<p>The breeding operations of a few species begin in June.</p>
+
+<p>Chief of these is that arch-villain <i>Corvus splendens</i>&mdash;the
+Indian house-crow. Crows have <a name="page109"></a>no fine feathers, hence the cocks
+do not "display" before the hens. To sing they know not how.
+Their courtship, therefore, provides a feast for neither the eye
+nor the ear of man. The lack of ornaments and voice perhaps
+explains the fact that among crows there is no noisy
+love-making. Crows make a virtue of necessity. Any attempt at
+courtship after the style of the costermonger is resented by the
+whole corvine community. The only amorous display permitted in
+public is head-tickling. The cock and the hen perch side by
+side, one ruffles the feathers of the neck, the other inserts
+its bill between the ruffled feathers of its companion and
+gently tickles its neck, to the accompaniment of soft gurgles.</p>
+
+<p>Crows are the most intelligent of birds. Like the other fowls of
+the air in which the brain is well developed, they build rough
+untidy nests&mdash;mere platforms placed in the fork of a branch of
+almost any kind of tree. The usual materials used in
+nest-construction are twigs, but crows do not limit themselves
+to these. They seem to take a positive pride in pressing into
+service materials of an uncommon nature. Cases are on record of
+nests composed entirely of spectacle-frames, wires <a name="page110"></a>used for the
+fixing of the corks of soda-water bottles, or pieces of tin
+discarded by tinsmiths.</p>
+
+<p>Four, five or six eggs are laid; these are of a pale
+greenish-blue hue, speckled or flaked with sepia markings. The
+hen alone collects the materials for the nest, but the cock
+supervises her closely, following her about and criticising her
+proceedings as she picks up twigs and works them into the nest.</p>
+
+<p>From the time of the laying of the first egg until the moment of
+the departure of the last young bird, one or other of the
+parents always mounts guard over the nest, except when they are
+chasing a koel. Crows are confirmed egg-lifters and
+chicken-stealers; they apply their standard of morality to other
+birds, and, in consequence, never leave their own offspring
+unguarded. A crow's nest at which there is no adult crow
+certainly contains neither eggs nor young birds.</p>
+
+<p>As has already been stated, crows spend, much time in teasing
+and annoying other birds. Retribution overtakes them in the
+nesting season. The Indian koel (<i>Eudynamis honorata</i>) cuckolds
+them. The crows either are aware of this or have an instinctive
+dislike <a name="page111"></a>to this cuckoo. The sight of the koel affects a crow in
+much the same way as a red cloth irritates a bull. One of these
+cuckoos has but to perch in a tree that contains a crow's nest
+and begin calling in order to make both the owners of the nest
+attack him. The koel takes full advantage of this fact. The cock
+approaches the nest and begins uttering his fluty <i>kuil</i>,
+<i>kuil</i>. The crows forthwith dash savagely at him. He flies off
+pursued by them. He can easily outdistance his pursuers, but is
+content to keep a lead of a few feet, crying <i>pip-pip</i> or
+<i>kuil-kuil</i>, and thus he lures the parent crows to some
+distance. No sooner are their backs turned than the hen koel
+slips quietly into the nest and deposits an egg in it. If she
+have time she carries off or throws out one or more of the
+legitimate eggs. When the crows return to the nest, having
+failed to catch the cock koel, they do not appear to notice the
+trick played upon them, although the koel's egg is smaller than
+theirs and of an olive-green colour. Through the greater part of
+June and July the koels keep the crows busy chasing them.
+Something approaching pandemonium reigns in the neighbourhood of
+a colony of nesting crows: from dawn till <a name="page112"></a>nightfall the shrieks
+and yells of the koels mingle with the harsh notes of the crows.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the crows return from the chase of the cock koel
+before the hen is ready, and surprise her in the nest; then they
+attack her. She flees in terror, and is followed by the corvi.
+Her screams when being thus pursued are loud enough to awaken
+the Seven Sleepers. She has cause for alarm, for, if the raging
+crows catch her, they will assuredly kill her. Such a tragedy
+does sometimes occur.</p>
+
+<p>Not infrequently it happens that more than one koel's egg is
+laid in a crow's nest.</p>
+
+<p>The incubation period of the egg of the koel is shorter than
+that of the crow, the consequence is that when, as usually
+happens, there is one of the former and several of the latter in
+a nest, the young koel is invariably the first to emerge. It
+does not attempt to eject from the nest either the legitimate
+eggs or the young crows when they appear on the scene. Indeed,
+it lives on excellent terms with its foster brethren. But to say
+this is to anticipate, for as a rule, neither young koels nor
+baby crows hatch out until July.</p>
+
+<p>The crow-pheasants (<i>Centropus sinensis</i>), <a name="page113"></a>which are cuckoos
+that do not lead a parasitic existence, are now busy with
+nursery duties. The nest of the crow-pheasant or coucal is a
+massive structure, globular in shape, with the entrance at one
+side. Large as the nest is, it is not often discovered by the
+naturalist because it is almost invariably situated in the midst
+of an impenetrable thicket. Three or four pure-white eggs are
+laid.</p>
+
+<p>The white-necked storks or beef-steak birds (<i>Dissura
+episcopus</i>) are busy at their nests in June. These birds build
+in large trees, usually at a distance from water. The nest is
+rudely constructed of twigs. It is about one and a half feet in
+diameter. The eggs are placed in a depression lined with straw,
+grass or feathers. White-necked storks often begin nest-building
+about the middle of May, but eggs are rarely laid earlier than
+the second week of June. House-crows nest at the same time of
+year, and they often worry the storks considerably by their
+impudent attempts to commit larceny of building material.</p>
+
+<p>The breeding season of the paddy-birds has now fairly begun.
+These birds, usually so solitary in habit, often nest in small
+colonies, sometimes in company with night-herons. <a name="page114"></a>The nest is a
+slender platform of sticks placed high up in a tree, often in
+the vicinity of human habitations. Nesting paddy-birds, or
+pond-herons as they are frequently called, utter all manner of
+weird calls, the one most frequently heard being a curious
+gurgle.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the amadavats build nests in June, but the great
+majority breed during the winter months.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the first rains have fallen a few of the
+pheasant-tailed jacanas begin nesting operations, but the
+greater number breed in August; for this reason their nests are
+described in the calendar for that month.</p>
+
+<p>In June a very striking bird makes its appearance in Northern
+India. This is the pied crested cuckoo (<i>Coccystes jacobinus</i>).
+Its under parts are white, as is a bar in the wing. The
+remainder of the plumage is glossy black. The head is adorned by
+an elegant crest. The pied cuckoo has a peculiar metallic call,
+which is as easy to recognise as it is difficult to describe.
+The bird victimises, not crows, but babblers; nevertheless the
+corvi seem to dislike it as intensely as they dislike koels.</p>
+
+<p>By the beginning of the month the great <a name="page115"></a>majority of the cock
+<i>bayas</i> or weaver-birds have assumed their black-and-golden
+wedding garment; nevertheless they do not as a rule begin to
+nest before July.</p>
+
+<p>The curious excrescence on the bill of the drake <i>nukta</i> or
+comb-duck is now much enlarged. This betokens the approach of
+the nesting season for that species.</p>
+
+<p>If the monsoon happen to burst early many of the birds which
+breed in the rains begin building their nests towards the end of
+June, but, in nine years out of ten, July marks the beginning of
+the breeding period of aquatic birds, therefore the account of
+their nests properly finds place in the calendar of that month,
+or of August, when the season is at its height.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page116"></a>
+<h3><a name="july">JULY</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="july poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>Alas! creative nature calls to light<br>
+ Myriads of winged forms in sportive flight,<br>
+ When gathered clouds with ceaseless fury pour<br>
+ A constant deluge in the rushing shower.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ <i>C<small>alcutta:</small> A P<small>oem</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>In July India becomes a theatre in which Nature stages a mighty
+transformation scene. The prospect changes with kaleidoscopic
+rapidity. The green water-logged earth is for a time overhung by
+dull leaden clouds; this sombre picture melts away into one,
+even more dismal, in which the rain pours down in torrents,
+enveloping everything in mist and moisture. Suddenly the sun
+blazes forth with indescribable brilliance and shines through an
+atmosphere, clear as crystal, from which every particle of dust
+has been washed away. Fleecy clouds sail majestically across the
+vaulted firmament. Then follows a gorgeous sunset in which
+changing colours run riot through sky and clouds&mdash;pearly grey,
+jet black, dark dun, pale lavender, deep mauve, rich <a name="page117"></a>carmine,
+and brightest gold. These colours fade away into the darkness of
+the night; the stars then peep forth and twinkle brightly. At
+the approach of "rosy-fingered" dawn their lights go out, one by
+one. Then blue tints appear in the firmament which deepen into
+azure. The glory of the ultramarine sky does not remain long
+without alloy: clouds soon appear. So the scene ever changes,
+hour by hour and day by day. Had the human being who passes July
+in the plains but one window to the soul and that the eye, the
+month would be one of pure joy, a month spent in the
+contemplation of splendid dawns, brilliant days, the rich green
+mantle of the earth, the majesty of approaching thunderclouds,
+and superb sunsets. But, alas, July is not a month of unalloyed
+pleasure. The temperature is tolerably low while the rain is
+actually falling; but the moment this ceases the European is
+subjected to the acute physical discomforts engendered by the
+hot, steamy, oppressive atmosphere, the ferocity of the sun's
+rays, and the teasing of thousands of biting and buzzing insects
+which the monsoon calls into being. Termites, crickets,
+red-bugs, stink-bugs, horseflies, mosquitoes, <a name="page118"></a>beetles and
+diptera of all shapes and sizes arise in millions as if
+spontaneously generated. Many of these are creatures of the
+night. Although born in darkness all seem to strive after light.
+Myriads of them collect round every burning lamp in the open
+air, to the great annoyance of the human being who attempts to
+read out of doors after dark. The spotted owlets, the toads and
+the lizards, however, take a different view of the invasion and
+partake eagerly of the rich feast provided for them.
+Notwithstanding the existence of <a href="#chik"><i>chiks</i></a>, or gauze doors, the
+hexapods crowd into the lighted bungalow, where every
+illumination soon becomes the centre of a collection of the
+bodies of the insects that have been burned by the flame, or
+scorched by the lamp chimney. Well is it for the rest of
+creation that most of these insects are short-lived. The span of
+life of many is but a day: were it much longer human beings
+could hardly manage to exist during the rains. Equally
+unbearable would life be were all the species of monsoon insects
+to come into being simultaneously. Fortunately they appear in
+relays. Every day some new forms enter on the stage of life and
+several make their exit. The <a name="page119"></a>pageant of insect life, then, is an
+ever-changing one. To-day one species predominates, to-morrow
+another, and the day after a third. Unpleasant and irritating
+though these insect hosts be to human beings, some pleasure is
+to be derived from watching them. Especially is this the case
+when the termites or white-ants swarm. In the damp parts of
+Lower Bengal these creatures may emerge at any time of the year.
+In Calcutta they swarm either towards the close of the rainy
+season or in spring after an exceptionally heavy thunderstorm.
+In Madras they emerge from their hiding-places in October with
+the northeast monsoon. In the United Provinces the winged
+termites appear after the first fall of the monsoon rain in June
+or July as the case may be. These succulent creatures provide a
+feast for the birds which is only equalled by that furnished by
+a flight of locusts. In the case of the termites it is not only
+the birds that partake. The ever-vigilant crows are of course
+the first to notice a swarm of termites, and they lose no time
+in setting to work. The kites are not far behind them. These
+great birds sail on the outskirts of the flight, seizing
+individuals with their claws and <a name="page120"></a>transferring them to the beak
+while on the wing. A few king-crows and bee-eaters join them. On
+the ground below magpie-robins, babblers, toads, lizards,
+musk-rats and other terrestrial creatures make merry. If the
+swarm comes out at dusk, as often happens, bats and spotted
+owlets join those of the gourmands that are feasting while on
+the wing.</p>
+
+<p>The earth is now green and sweet. The sugar-cane grows apace.
+The rice, the various millets and the other autumn crops are
+being sown. The cultivators take full advantage of every break
+in the rains to conduct agricultural operations.</p>
+
+<p>As we have seen, the nocturnal chorus of the birds is now
+replaced by the croaking of frogs and the stridulation of
+crickets. In the day-time the birds still have plenty to say for
+themselves. The brain-fever birds scream as lustily as they did
+in May and June. The koel is, if possible, more vociferous than
+ever, especially at the beginning of the month. The Indian
+cuckoo does not call so frequently as formerly, but, by way of
+compensation, the pied crested cuckoo uplifts his voice at short
+intervals.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>whoot</i>, <i>whoot</i>, <i>whoot</i> of the crow-pheasant <a name="page121"></a>booms from
+almost every thicket. The iora, the coppersmith, the barbet, the
+golden-backed woodpecker, and the white-breasted kingfisher
+continue to call merrily. The pied starlings are in full voice;
+their notes form a very pleasing addition to the avian chorus.
+Those magpie-robins that have not brought nesting operations to
+a close are singing vigorously. The king-crows are feeding their
+young ones in the greenwood tree, and crooning softly to them
+<i>pitchu-wee</i>. At the <a href="#jhil"><i>jhils</i></a> the various waterfowl are nesting
+and each one proclaims the fact by its allotted call. Much
+strange music emanates from the well-filled tank; the
+indescribable cries of the purple coots, the curious "fixed
+bayonets" of the cotton teal and the weird cat-like mews of the
+jacanas form the dominant notes of the aquatic symphony.</p>
+
+<p>In July the black-breasted or rain-quail (<i>Coturnix
+coromandelica</i>) is plentiful in India. Much remains to be
+discovered regarding the movements of this species. It appears
+to migrate to Bengal, the United Provinces, the Punjab and Sind
+shortly before the monsoon bursts, but it is said to arrive in
+Nepal as early as April. It would seem <a name="page122"></a>to winter in South India.
+It is a smaller bird than the ordinary grey quail and has no
+pale cross-bars on the primary wing feathers. The males of this
+species are held in high esteem by Indians as fighting birds.
+Large numbers of them are netted in the same way as the grey
+quail. Some captive birds are set down in a covered cage by a
+sugar-cane field in the evening. Their calls attract a number of
+wild birds, which settle down in the sugar-cane in order to
+spend the day there. At dawn a net is quietly stretched across
+one end of the field. A rope is then slowly dragged along over
+the growing crop in the direction of the net. This sends all the
+quail into the net.</p>
+
+<p>Very fair sport may be obtained in July by shooting rain-quail
+that have been attracted by call birds.</p>
+
+<p>July marks the end of one breeding season and the beginning of
+another. As regards the nesting season, birds fall into four
+classes. There is the very large class that nests in spring and
+summer. Next in importance is the not inconsiderable body that
+rears up its broods in the rains when the food supply is most
+abundant. Then comes the small <a name="page123"></a>company that builds nests in the
+pleasant winter time. Lastly there are the perennials&mdash;such
+birds as the sparrow and the dove, which nest at all seasons. In
+the present month the last of the summer nesting birds close
+operations for the year, and the monsoon birds begin to lay
+their eggs. July is therefore a favourable month for
+bird-nesting. Moreover, the sun is sometimes obscured by cloud
+and, under such conditions, a human being is able to remain out
+of doors throughout the day without suffering much physical
+discomfort.</p>
+
+<p>With July ends the normal breeding season of the tree-pies,
+white-eyes, ioras; king-crows, bank-mynas, paradise flycatchers,
+brown rock-chats, Indian robins, dhayals, red-winged bush-larks,
+sunbirds, rollers, swifts, green pigeons, lapwings and
+butcher-birds.</p>
+
+<p>The paradise flycatchers leave Northern India and migrate
+southwards a few weeks after the young birds have left the nest.</p>
+
+<p>Numbers of bulbuls' nests are likely to be found in July, but
+the breeding time of these birds is rapidly drawing to its
+close. Sparrows and doves are of course engaged in parental
+<a name="page124"></a>duties; their eggs have been taken in every month of the year.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season is now at its height for the white-necked
+storks, the koels and their dupes&mdash;the house-crows, also for the
+various babblers and their deceivers&mdash;the brain-fever birds and
+the pied crested cuckoos. The tailor-birds, the ashy and the
+Indian wren-warblers, the brahminy mynas, the wire-tailed
+swallows, the amadavats, the sirkeer cuckoos, the pea-fowl, the
+water-hens, the common and the pied mynas, the cuckoo-shrikes
+and the orioles are all fully occupied with nursery duties. The
+earliest of the brain-fever birds to be hatched have left the
+nest. Like all its family the young hawk-cuckoo has a healthy
+appetite. In order to satisfy it the unfortunate foster-parents
+have to work like slaves, and often must they wonder why nature
+has given them so voracious a child. When it sees a babbler
+approaching with food, the cuckoo cries out and flaps its wings
+vigorously. Sometimes these completely envelop the parent bird
+while it is thrusting food into the yellow mouth of the cuckoo.
+The breast of the newly-fledged brain-fever bird is covered with
+dark brown drops, so <a name="page125"></a>that, when seen from below, it looks like a
+thrush with yellow legs. Its cries, however, are not at all
+thrushlike.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the wire-tailed swallows, minivets and white-browed
+fantail flycatchers bring up a second brood during the rains.
+The loud cheerful call of the last is heard very frequently in
+July.</p>
+
+<p>Numbers of young bee-eaters are to be seen hawking at insects;
+they are distinguishable from adults by the dullness of the
+plumage and the fact that the median tail feathers are not
+prolonged as bristles.</p>
+
+<p>Very few crows emerge from the egg before the 1st of July, but,
+during the last week in June, numbers of baby koels are hatched
+out. The period of incubation for the koel's egg is shorter than
+that of the crow, hence at the outset the baby koel steals a
+march on his foster-brothers. Koel nestlings, when they first
+emerge from the egg, differ greatly in appearance from baby
+crows. The skin of the koel is black, that of crow is pink for
+the first two days of its existence, but it grows darker
+rapidly. The baby crow is the bigger bird and has a larger mouth
+with fleshy sides. The sides of the mouth of the young koel are
+<a name="page126"></a>not fleshy. The neck of the crow nestling is long and the head
+hangs down, whereas the koel's neck is short and the bird
+carries its head huddled in its shoulders. Crows nest high up in
+trees, these facts are therefore best observed by sending up an
+expert climber with a tin half-full of sawdust to which a long
+string is attached. The climber lets down the eggs or nestlings
+in the tin and the observer can examine them in comfort on
+<i>terra firma</i>. The parent crows do not appear to notice how
+unlike the young koels are to their own nestlings, for they feed
+them most assiduously and make a great uproar when the koels are
+taken from the nest. Baby crows are noisy creatures; koels are
+quiet and timid at first, but become noisier as they grow older.</p>
+
+<p>The feathers of crow nestlings are black in each sex. Young
+koels fall into three classes: those of which the feathers are
+all black, those of which a few feathers have white or reddish
+tips, those which are speckled black and white all over because
+each feather has a white tip. The two former appear to be young
+cocks and the last to be hens. Baby koels, in addition to
+hatching out before their foster-brethren, develop more quickly,
+so that <a name="page127"></a>they leave the nest fully a week in advance of the young
+corvi. After vacating the nest they squat for some days on a
+branch close by; numbers of them are to be seen thus in suitable
+localities towards the end of July. At first the call of the
+koel is a squeak, but later it takes the form of a creditable,
+if ludicrous, attempt at a caw. The young cuckoo does not seem
+to be able to distinguish its foster-parents from other crows;
+it clamours for food whenever any crow comes near it.</p>
+
+<p>Of the scenes characteristic of the rains in India none is more
+pleasing than that presented by a colony of nest-building bayas
+or weaver-birds (<i>Ploceus baya</i>). These birds build in company.
+Sometimes more than twenty of their wonderful retort-like nests
+are to be seen in one tree. This means that more than forty
+birds are at work, and, as each of these indulges in much
+cheerful twittering, the tree in question presents an animated
+scene. Both sexes take part in nest-construction.</p>
+
+<p>Having selected the branch of a tree from which the nest will
+hang, the birds proceed to collect material. Each completed nest
+contains many yards of fibre not much thicker than stout thread.
+Such material is not found <a name="page128"></a>in quantity in nature. The bayas
+have, therefore, to manufacture it. This is easily done. The
+building weaver-bird betakes itself to a clump of
+elephant-grass, and, perching on one of the blades, makes a
+notch in another near the base. Then, grasping with its beak the
+edge of this blade above the notch, the baya flies away and thus
+strips off a narrow strand. Sometimes the strand adheres to the
+main part of the blade at the tip so firmly that the force of
+the flying baya is not sufficient to sever it. The bird then
+swings for a few seconds in mid-air, suspended by the strip
+of leaf. Not in the least daunted the baya makes a fresh effort
+and flies off, still gripping the strand firmly. At the third,
+if not at the second attempt, the thin strip is completely
+severed. Having secured its prize the weaver-bird proceeds to
+tear off one or two more strands and then flies with these in
+its bill to the nesting site, uttering cries of delight. The
+fibres obtained in this manner are bound round the branch from
+which the nest will hang. More strands are added to form a
+stalk; when this has attained a length of several inches it is
+gradually expanded in the form of an umbrella or bell. The next
+step is to weave <a name="page129"></a>a band of grass across the mouth of the bell.
+In this condition the nest is often left unfinished. Indians
+call such incomplete nests <i>jhulas</i> or swings; they assert that
+these are made in order that the cocks may sit in them and sing
+to their mates while these are incubating the eggs. It may be,
+as "Eha" suggests, that at this stage the birds are dissatisfied
+with the balance of the nest and for this reason leave it. If
+the nest, at this point of its construction, please the
+weaver-birds they proceed to finish it by closing up the bell at
+one side of the cross-band to form a receptacle for the eggs,
+and prolonging the other half of the bell into a long tunnel or
+neck. This neck forms the entrance to the nest; towards its
+extremity it becomes very flimsy so that it affords no foothold
+to an enemy. Nearly every baya's nest contains some lumps of
+clay attached to it. Jerdon was of opinion that the function of
+these is to balance the nest properly. Indians state that the
+bird sticks fireflies into the lumps of clay to light up the
+nest at night. This story has found its way into some
+ornithological text-books. There is no truth in it. The present
+writer is inclined to think that the <a name="page130"></a>object of these lumps of
+clay is to prevent the light loofah-like nest swinging too
+violently in a gale of wind.</p>
+
+<p>Both sexes take part in nest-construction. After the formation
+of the cross-bar at the mouth of the bell one of the birds sits
+inside and the other outside, and they pass the strands to each
+other and thus the weaving proceeds rapidly. While working at
+the nest the bayas, more especially the cocks, are in a most
+excited state. They sing, scream, flap their wings and snap the
+bill. Sometimes one cock in his excitement attacks a neighbour
+by jumping on his back! This results in a fight in which the
+birds flutter in the air, pecking at one another. Often the
+combatants "close" for a few seconds, but neither bird seems to
+get hurt in these little contests.</p>
+
+<p>Every bird-lover should make a point of watching a company of
+weaver-birds while these are constructing their nests. The tree
+or trees in which they build can easily be located by sending a
+servant in July to search for them. The favourite sites for
+nests in the United Provinces seem to be babul trees that grow
+near borrow pits alongside the railroad.</p>
+<a name="page131"></a>
+<p>In the rainy season two other birds weave nests, which are
+nearly as elegant as those woven by the baya. These birds,
+however, do not nest in company. They usually build inside
+bushes, or in long grass.</p>
+
+<p>For this reason they do not lend themselves to observation while
+at work so readily as bayas do. The birds in question are the
+Indian and the ashy wren-warbler.</p>
+
+<p>The former species brings up two broods in the year. One, as has
+been mentioned, in March and the other in the "rains."</p>
+
+<p>The nest of the Indian wren-warbler (<i>Prinia inornata</i>) is,
+except for its shape and its smaller size, very like that of a
+weaver-bird. It is an elongated purse or pocket, closely and
+compactly woven with fine strips of grass from 1/40 to 1/20 inch
+in breadth. The nest is entered by a hole near the top. Both
+birds work at the nest, clinging first to the neighbouring stems
+of grass or twigs, and later to the nest itself when this has
+attained sufficient dimensions to afford them foothold. They
+push the ends of the grass in and out just as weaver-birds do.
+Like the baya, the Indian wren-warbler does not line its nest.
+The eggs are pale greenish-blue, richly <a name="page132"></a>marked by various shades
+of deep chocolate and reddish-brown. As Hume remarks: "nothing
+can exceed the beauty or variety of markings, which are a
+combination of bold blotches, clouds and spots, with delicate,
+intricately woven lines, recalling somewhat ... those of our
+early favourite&mdash;the yellow-hammer."</p>
+
+<p>The ashy wren-warbler (<i>Prinia socialis</i>) builds two distinct
+kinds of nest. One is just like that of the tailor-bird, being
+formed by sewing or cobbling together two, three, four or five
+leaves, and lining the cup thus formed with down, wool, cotton
+or other soft material. The second kind of nest is a woven one.
+This is a hollow ball with a hole in the side. The weaving is
+not so neat as that of the baya and the Indian wren-warbler.
+Moreover, several kinds of material are usually worked into the
+nest, which is invariably lined.</p>
+
+<p>The building of two totally different types of nest is an
+interesting phenomenon, and seems to indicate that under the
+name <i>Prinia socialis</i> are classed two different species, which
+anatomically are so like one another that systematists are
+unable to separate them. <a name="page133"></a>Both kinds of nests are found in the
+same locality and at the same time of the year. Against the
+theory that there are two species of ashy wren-warbler is the
+fact that there is no difference in appearance between the eggs
+found in the two kinds of nest. All eggs are brick-red or
+mahogany colour, without any spots or markings.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the Indian cliff-swallows, of which the nests are
+described in the calendar for March, bring up a second brood in
+the "rains."</p>
+
+<p>Needless to state that in the monsoon the tank and the <i>jhil</i>
+are the happy hunting grounds of the ornithologist.</p>
+
+<p>In July and August not less than thirty species of waterfowl
+nidificate. Floating nests are constructed by sarus cranes,
+purple coots and the jacanas. The various species of egrets
+breed in colonies in trees in some village not far from a tank;
+in company with them spoonbills, cormorants, snake-birds,
+night-herons and other birds often nest. The white-breasted
+waterhen constructs its nursery in a thicket at the margin of
+some village pond. The resident ducks are also busy with their
+nests. These are in branches of trees, in <a name="page134"></a>holes in trees or old
+buildings, or on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>When describing the nesting operations of waterfowl in Northern
+India it is difficult to apportion these between July and
+August, for the eggs of almost all such species are as likely to
+be found in the one month as in the other. A few individuals
+begin to lay in June, the majority commence in July, but a great
+many defer operations until August. There is scarcely an aquatic
+species of which it can be said: "It never lays before August."
+Nor are there many of which it can be asserted: "Their eggs are
+never found after July."</p>
+
+<p>Individuals differ in their habit. A retarded monsoon means that
+the water-birds begin to nest later than usual. The first fall
+of the monsoon rain seems to be the signal for the commencement
+of nesting operations, but by no means every pair of birds obeys
+the signal immediately.</p>
+
+<p>The nearest approach to a generalisation which it is possible to
+make is that the egrets and paddy-birds are usually the first of
+the monsoon breeders to begin nest-building, while the
+spot-billed duck, the whistling teal and the bronze-winged
+jacana are the last. In other <a name="page135"></a>words, the eggs of the former are
+most likely to be found in July and those of the latter in
+August.</p>
+
+<p>As the calendar for this month has already attained considerable
+dimensions, a description of the nests of all these water-birds
+is given in the August calendar. It is, however, necessary to
+state that the eggs of the following birds are likely to be
+found in July: purple coot, common coot, bronze-winged and
+pheasant-tailed jacana, black ibis, white-necked stork,
+cormorant, snake-bird, cotton teal, comb duck, spot-billed duck,
+spoonbill, and the various herons and egrets.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page136"></a>
+<h3><a name="august">AUGUST</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="august poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>See! the flushed horizon flames intense<br>
+ With vivid red, in rich profusion streamed<br>
+ O'er heaven's pure arch. At once the clouds assume<br>
+ Their gayest liveries; these with silvery beams<br>
+ Fringed lovely; splendid those in liquid gold,<br>
+ And speak their sovereign's state. He comes, behold!</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ M<small>ALLET.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The transformation scene described in July continues throughout
+August. Torrential rain alternates with fierce sunshine. The
+earth is verdant with all shades of green. Most conspicuous of
+these are the yellowish verdure of the newly-transplanted rice,
+the vivid emerald of the young plants that have taken root, the
+deeper hue of the growing sugar-cane, and the dark green of the
+mango <a href="#tope">topes</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Unless the monsoon has been unusually late in reaching Northern
+India the autumn crops are all sown before the first week in
+August. The sugar-cane is now over five feet in height. The
+cultivators are busily <a name="page137"></a>transplanting the better kinds of rice,
+or running the plough through fields in which the coarser
+varieties are growing.</p>
+
+<p>The aloes are in flower. Their white spikes of drooping
+tulip-like flowers are almost the only inflorescences to be seen
+outside gardens at this season of the year. The mango crop is
+over, but that of the pineapples takes its place.</p>
+
+<p>At night-time many of the trees are illumined by hundreds of
+fireflies. These do not burn their lamps continuously. Each
+insect lets its light shine for a few seconds and then suddenly
+puts it out. It sometimes happens that all the fireflies in a
+tree show their lights and extinguish them simultaneously and
+thereby produce a luminous display which is strikingly
+beautiful. Fireflies are to be seen during the greater part of
+the year, but they are far more abundant in the "rains" than at
+any other season.</p>
+
+<p>As in July so in August the voices of the birds are rarely heard
+after dark. The nocturnal music is now the product of the
+batrachian band, ably seconded by the crickets.</p>
+
+<p>During a prolonged break in the rains the frogs and toads are
+hushed, except in <a href="#jhil"><i>jhils</i></a> <a name="page138"></a>
+and low-lying paddy fields. Cessation
+of the rain, however, does not silence the crickets.</p>
+
+<p>The first streak of dawn is the signal for the striking up of
+the jungle and the spotted owlets. Hard upon them follow the
+koels and the brain-fever birds. These call only for a short
+time, remaining silent during the greater part of the day. Other
+birds that lift up their voices at early dawn are the
+crow-pheasant, the black partridge and the peacock. These also
+call towards dusk. As soon as the sun has risen the green
+barbets, coppersmiths, white-breasted kingfishers and king-crows
+utter their familiar notes; even these birds are heard but
+rarely in the middle of the day, nor have their voices the
+vigour that characterised them in the hot weather. Occasionally
+the brown rock-chat emits a few notes, but he does so in a
+half-hearted manner. In the early days of August the
+magpie-robins sing at times; their song, however, is no longer
+the brilliant performance it was. By the end of the month it has
+completely died away.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian cuckoo no more raises its voice in the plains, but
+the pied crested-cuckoo continues to call lustily and the pied
+starlings make a joyful noise. The oriole's liquid <a name="page139"></a><i>pee-ho</i> is
+gradually replaced by the loud <i>tew</i>, which is its usual cry at
+times when it is not nesting.</p>
+
+<p>The water-birds, being busy at their nests, are of course noisy,
+but, with the exception of the loud trumpeting of the sarus
+cranes, their vocal efforts are heard only at the <i>jhil</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The did-he-do-its, the rollers, the bee-eaters, two or three
+species of warblers and the perennial singers complete the avian
+chorus.</p>
+
+<p>Numbers of rosy starlings are returning from Asia Minor, where
+they have reared up their broods. The inrush of these birds
+begins in July and continues till October. They are the
+forerunners of the autumn immigrants. Towards the end of the
+month the garganey or blue-winged teal (<i>Querquedula circia</i>),
+which are the earliest of the migratory ducks to visit India,
+appear on the tanks. Along with them comes the advance-guard of
+the snipe. The pintail snipe (<i>Gallinago stenura</i>) are
+invariably the first to appear, but they visit only the eastern
+parts of Northern India. Large numbers of them sojourn in Bengal
+and Assam. Stragglers appear in the eastern portion of the
+United Provinces; in the western districts and in the Punjab
+this snipe <a name="page140"></a>is a <i>rara avis</i>. By the third week in August good
+bags of pintail snipe are sometimes obtained in Bengal. The
+fantail or full-snipe (<i>G. coelestis</i>) is at least one week
+later in arriving. This species has been shot as early as the
+24th August, but there is no general immigration of even the
+advance-guard until quite the end of the month.</p>
+
+<p>The jack-snipe (<i>G. gallinula</i>) seems never to appear before
+September.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the monsoon broods of the Indian cliff-swallow emerge
+from the eggs in August. The "rains" breeding season of the
+amadavats or red munias is now over, and the bird-catcher issues
+forth to snare them.</p>
+
+<p>His stock-in-trade consists of some seed and two or three
+amadavats in one of the pyramid-shaped wicker cages that can be
+purchased for a few annas in any bazaar. To the base of one of
+the sides of the cage a flap is attached by a hinge. The flap,
+which is of the same shape and size as the side of the cage, is
+composed of a frame over which a small-meshed string net is
+stretched. A long string is fastened to the apex of the flap and
+passed through a loop at the top of the cage. Selecting an open
+space near some tall grass in which <a name="page141"></a>amadavats are feeding, the
+bird-catcher sets down the cage and loosens the string so that
+the flap rests on the earth. Some seed is sprinkled on the flap.
+Then the trapper squats behind a bush, holding the end of the
+string in his hand. The cheerful little <i>lals</i> inside the cage
+soon begin to twitter and sing, and their calls attract the wild
+amadavats in the vicinity. These come to the cage, alight on the
+flap, and begin to eat the seed. The bird-catcher gives the
+string a sharp pull and thus traps his victims between the flap
+and the side of the cage. He then disentangles them, places them
+in the cage, and again sets the trap.</p>
+
+<p>Almost all the birds that rear up their young in the spring have
+finished nesting duties for the year by August. Here and there a
+pair of belated rollers may be seen feeding their young. Before
+the beginning of the month nearly all the young crows and koels
+have emerged from the egg, and the great majority of them have
+left the nest. Young house-crows are distinguished from adults
+by the indistinctness of the grey on the neck. They continually
+open their great red mouths to clamour for food.</p>
+<a name="page142"></a>
+<p>The wire-tailed swallows, swifts, pied crested-cuckoos,
+crow-pheasants, butcher-birds, cuckoo-shrikes, fantail
+flycatchers, babblers, white-necked storks, wren-warblers,
+weaver-birds, common and pied mynas, peafowl, and almost all the
+resident water-birds, waders and swimmers, except the terns and
+the plovers, are likely to have eggs or young. The nesting
+season of the swifts and butcher-birds is nearly over. In the
+case of the others it is at its height. The wire-tailed swallows
+and minivets are busy with their second broods. The nests of
+most of these birds have already been described.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian peafowl (<i>Pavo cristatus</i>) usually lay their large
+white eggs on the ground in long grass or thick undergrowth.
+Sometimes they nestle on the grass-grown roofs of deserted
+buildings or in other elevated situations. Egrets, night-herons,
+cormorants, darters, paddy-birds, openbills, and spoonbills
+build stick nests in trees. These birds often breed in large
+colonies. In most cases the site chosen is a clump of trees in a
+village which is situated on the border of a tank. Sometimes all
+these species nest in company. Hume described a village in
+Mainpuri where scores of the <a name="page143"></a>above-mentioned birds, together
+with some whistling teal and comb-ducks, nested simultaneously.
+After a site has been selected by a colony the birds return year
+after year to the place for nesting purposes. The majority of
+the eggs are laid in July, the young appearing towards the end
+of that month or early in the present one.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of the sarus crane (<i>Grus antigone</i>) is nearly always
+an islet some four feet in diameter, which either floats in
+shallow water or rises from the ground and projects about a foot
+above the level of the water. The nest is composed of dried
+rushes. It may be placed in a <i>jhil</i>, a paddy field, or a borrow
+pit by the railway line. A favourite place is the midst of paddy
+cultivation in some low-lying field where the water is too deep
+to admit of the growing of rice. Two very large white eggs,
+rarely three, are laid. This species makes no attempt to conceal
+its nest. In the course of a railway journey in August numbers
+of incubating saruses may be seen by any person who takes the
+trouble to look for them.</p>
+
+<p>"Raoul" makes the extraordinary statement that incubating sarus
+cranes do not sit when <a name="page144"></a>incubating, but hatch the eggs by
+standing over them, one leg on each side of the nest! Needless
+to say there is no truth whatever in this statement. The legs of
+the sitting sarus crane are folded under it, as are those of
+incubating flamingos and other long-legged birds.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the month of August two of the most interesting birds
+in India are busy with their nests. They are the pheasant-tailed
+and the bronze-winged jacana. These birds live, move and have
+their being on the surface of lotus-covered tanks. Owing to the
+great length of their toes jacanas are able to run about with
+ease over the surface of the floating leaves of water-lilies and
+other aquatic plants, or over tangled masses of rushes and
+water-weeds.</p>
+
+<p>In the monsoon many tanks are so completely covered with
+vegetation that almost the only water visible to a person
+standing on the bank consists of the numerous drops that have
+been thrown on to the flat surfaces of the leaves, where they
+glisten in the sun like pearls.</p>
+
+<p>Two species of jacana occur in India: the bronze-winged
+(<i>Motopus indicus</i>) and the pheasant-tailed jacana or the
+water-pheasant <a name="page145"></a>(<i>Hydrophasianus chirurgus</i>). They are to be
+found on most tanks in the well-watered parts of the United
+Provinces. They occur in small flocks and are often put up by
+sportsmen when shooting duck. They emit weird mewing cries. The
+bronze-winged jacana is a black bird with bronze wings. It is
+about the size of a pigeon, but has much longer legs. The
+pheasant-tailed species is a black-and-white bird. In winter the
+tail is short, but in May both sexes grow long pheasant-like
+caudal feathers which give the bird its popular name. The
+bronze-winged jacana does not grow these long tail feathers.</p>
+
+<p>The nests of jacanas are truly wonderful structures. They are
+just floating pads of rushes and leaves of aquatic plants.
+Sometimes practically the whole of the pad is under water, so
+that the eggs appear to be resting on the surface of the tank.
+The nest of the bronze-winged species is usually larger and more
+massive than that of the water-pheasant. The latter's nest is
+sometimes so small as hardly to be able to contain the eggs&mdash;a
+little, shallow, circular cup of rushes and water-weeds or
+floating lotus leaves or tufts of water-grass. The eggs of the
+two species show but <a name="page146"></a>little similarity. Both, however, are very
+beautiful and remarkable. The eggs of the bronze-winged jacana
+have a rich brownish-bronze background, on which black lines are
+scribbled in inextricable confusion, so that the egg looks as
+though Arabic texts had been scrawled over it. This species
+might well be called "the Arabic writing-master." The eggs of
+the water-pheasant are in shape like pegtops without the peg.
+They are of a dark rich green-bronze colour, and devoid of any
+markings.</p>
+
+<p>The nest of the handsome, but noisy, purple coot (<i>Porphyrio
+poliocephalus</i>) is a platform of rushes and reeds which is
+sometimes placed on the ground in a rice field, but is more
+often floating, and is then tethered to a tree or some other
+object. From six to ten eggs are laid. These are very beautiful
+objects. The ground colour is delicate pink. This is spotted and
+blotched with crimson; beneath these spots there are clouds of
+pale purple which have the appearance of lying beneath the
+surface of the shell.</p>
+
+<p>The white-breasted water-hen (<i>Gallinula phoenicura</i>) is a bird
+that must be familiar to all. One pair, at least, is to be found
+in <a name="page147"></a>every village which boasts of a tank and a bamboo clump, no
+matter how small these be. The water-hen is a black bird about
+the size of the average bazaar fowl, with a white face, throat
+and breast. It carries its short tail almost erect, and under
+this is a patch of brick-red feathers. During most seasons of
+the year it is a silent bird, but from mid-May until the end of
+the monsoon it is exceedingly noisy, and, were it in the habit
+of haunting our gardens and compounds, its cries would attract
+as much attention as do those of the koel and the brain-fever
+bird. As, however, water-hens are confined to tiny hamlets
+situated far away from cities, many people are not acquainted
+with their calls, which "Eha" describes as "roars, hiccups and
+cackles." The nest is built in a bamboo clump or other dense
+thicket. The eggs are stone-coloured, with spots of brown, red
+and purple. The young birds, when first hatched, are covered
+with black down, and look like little black ducklings. They can
+run, swim and dive as soon as they leave the egg. Little parties
+of them are to be seen at the edge of most village tanks in
+August.</p>
+
+<p>The resident ducks are all busy with their <a name="page148"></a>nests. The majority
+of them lay their eggs in July, so that in August they are
+occupied with their young.</p>
+
+<p>The cotton-teal (<i>Nettopus coromandelianus</i>) usually lays its
+eggs in a hole in a mango or other tree. The hollow is sometimes
+lined with feathers and twigs. It is not very high up as a rule,
+from six to twelve feet above the ground being the usual level.
+The tree selected for the nesting site is not necessarily close
+to water. Thirteen or fourteen eggs seem to be the usual clutch,
+but as many as twenty-two have been taken from one nest. Young
+teal, when they emerge from the egg, can swim and walk, but they
+are unable to fly. No European seems to have actually observed
+the process whereby they get from the nest to the ground or the
+water. It is generally believed that the parent birds carry
+them. Mr. Stuart Baker writes that a very intelligent native
+once told him that, early one morning, before it was light, he
+was fishing in a tank, when he saw a bird flutter heavily into
+the water from a tree in front of him and some twenty paces
+distant. The bird returned to the tree, and again, with much
+beating of the wings, fluttered down to the surface of the tank;
+<a name="page149"></a>this performance was repeated again and again at intervals of
+some minutes. At first the native could only make out that the
+cause of the commotion was a bird of some kind, but after a few
+minutes, he, remaining crouched among the reeds and bushes, saw
+distinctly that it was a cotton-teal, and that each time it
+flopped into the water and rose again it left a gosling behind
+it. The young ones were carried somehow in the feet, but the
+parent bird seemed to find the carriage of its offspring no easy
+matter; it flew with difficulty, and fell into the water with
+considerable force.</p>
+
+<p>August is the month in which some fortunate observer will one
+year be able to confirm or refute this story.</p>
+
+<p>The comb-duck or <i>nukta</i> (<i>Sarcidiornis melanotus</i>), which looks
+more like a freak of some domesticated breed than one of
+nature's own creatures, makes, in July or August, a nest of
+grass and sticks in a hole in a tree or in the fork of a stout
+branch. Sometimes disused nests of other species are utilised.
+About a dozen eggs is the usual number of the clutch, but
+Anderson once found a nest containing no fewer than forty eggs.</p>
+<a name="page150"></a>
+<p>The lesser whistling-teal (<i>Dendrocygna javanica</i>) usually
+builds its nest in a hollow in a tree. Sometimes it makes use of
+the deserted nursery of another species, and there are many
+cases on record of the nest being on the ground, a <i>bund</i>, or a
+piece of high ground in a <i>jhil</i>. Eight or ten eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>The little grebe or dabchick (<i>Podiceps albipennis</i>) is another
+species that lays in July or August. This bird, which looks like
+a miniature greyish-brown duck without a tail, must be familiar
+to Anglo-Indians, since at least one pair are to be seen on
+almost every pond or tank in Northern India. Although permanent
+residents in this country, little grebes leave, in the "rains,"
+those tanks that do not afford plenty of cover, and betake
+themselves to a <i>jhil</i> where vegetation is luxuriant. The nest,
+like that of other species that build floating cradles, is a
+tangle of weeds and rushes. When the incubating bird leaves the
+nest she invariably covers the white eggs with wet weeds, and,
+as Hume remarks, it is almost impossible to catch the old bird
+on the nest or to take her so much by surprise as not to allow
+her time to cover up the eggs. As a matter of fact, these birds
+<a name="page151"></a>spend very little time upon the nest in the day-time. The sun's
+rays are powerful enough not only to supply the heat necessary
+for incubation but to bake the eggs. This <i>contretemps</i>,
+however, is avoided by placing wet weeds on the eggs and by the
+general moisture of the nest. No better idea of the heat of
+India during the monsoon can be furnished than that afforded by
+the case of some cattle-egrets' eggs taken by a friend of the
+writer's in August, 1913. He found a clutch of four eggs; not
+having leisure at the time to blow them, he placed them in a
+bowl on the drawing-room mantelshelf. On the evening of the
+following day he heard some squeaks, but, thinking that these
+sounds emanated from a musk-rat or one of the other numerous
+rent-free tenants of every Indian bungalow, paid little heed to
+them. When, however, the same sounds were heard some hours later
+and appeared to emanate from the mantelpiece, he went to the
+bowl, and, lo and behold, two young egrets had emerged! These
+were at once fed. They lived for three days and appeared to be
+in good health, when they suddenly gave up the ghost.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page152"></a>
+<h3><a name="september">SEPTEMBER</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="september poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>And sweet it is by lonely meres<br>
+ To sit, with heart and soul awake,<br>
+ Where water-lilies lie afloat,<br>
+ Each anchored like a fairy boat<br>
+ Amid some fabled elfin lake:<br>
+ To see the birds flit to and fro<br>
+ Along the dark-green reedy edge.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ M<small>ARY</small> H<small>OWITT.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>September is a much-abused month. Many people assert that it is
+the most unpleasant and unhealthy season of the year.</p>
+
+<p>Malarial and muggy though it is, September scarcely merits all
+the evil epithets that are applied to it. The truth is that,
+after the torrid days of the hot weather and the humid heat of
+the rainy season, the European is thoroughly weary of his
+tropical surroundings, his vitality is at a low ebb, he is
+languid and irritable, thus he complains bitterly of the climate
+of September, notwithstanding the fact that it is a distinct
+improvement on that of the two preceding months.</p>
+<a name="page153"></a>
+<p>In the early part of the month the weather differs little from
+that of July and August. The days are somewhat shorter and the
+sun's rays somewhat less powerful, in consequence the average
+temperature is slightly lower. Normally the rains cease in the
+second half of the month. Then the sky resumes the fleckless
+blueness which characterises it during the greater part of the
+year. The blue of the sky is more pure and more intense in
+September than at other times, except during breaks in the
+monsoon, because the rain has washed from the atmosphere the
+myriads of specks of dust that are usually suspended in it.</p>
+
+<p>The cessation of the rains is followed by a period of steamy
+heat. As the moisture of the air gradually diminishes the
+temperature rises. But each September day is shorter than the
+one before it, and, hour by hour, the rays of the sun part with
+some of their power. Towards the end of the month the nights are
+cooler than they have been for some time. At sunset the village
+smoke begins to hang low in a diaphanous cloud&mdash;a sure sign of
+the approaching cold weather. The night dews are heavy. In the
+morning the blades of grass and the webs of the spiders are
+<a name="page154"></a>bespangled with pearly dewdrops. Cool zephyrs greet the rising
+sun. At dawn there is, in the last days of the month, a touch of
+cold in the air.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian countryside displays a greenness which is almost
+spring-like; not quite spring-like, because the fierce greens
+induced by the monsoon rains are not of the same hues as those
+of the young leaves of spring. The foliage is almost entirely
+free from dust. This fact adds to the vernal appearance of the
+landscape. The <a href="#jhil"><i>jhils</i></a> and tanks are filled with water, and,
+being overgrown with luxuriant vegetation, enhance the beauty of
+the scene. But, almost immediately after the cessation of the
+rains, the country begins to assume its usual look. Day by day
+the grass loses a little of its greenness. The earth dries up
+gradually, and its surface once more becomes dusty. The dust is
+carried to the foliage, on which it settles, subduing the
+natural greenery of the leaves. No sooner do the rains cease
+than the rivers begin to fall. By November most of them will be
+sandy wastes in which the insignificant stream is almost lost to
+view.</p>
+
+<p>The mimosas flower in September. Their <a name="page155"></a>yellow spherical blossoms
+are rendered pale by contrast with the deep gold hue of the
+blooms of the <i>san</i> (hemp) which now form a conspicuous feature
+of the landscape in many districts. The cork trees
+(<i>Millingtonia hortensis</i>) become bespangled with hanging
+clusters of white, long-tubed, star-like flowers that give out
+fragrant perfume at night.</p>
+
+<p>The first-fruits of the autumn harvest are being gathered in.
+Acre upon acre of the early-sown rice falls before the sickle.
+The threshing-floors once again become the scene of animation.
+The fallow fields are being prepared for the spring crops and
+the sowing of the grain is beginning.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the month insect life is as rich and varied as it was
+in July and August.</p>
+
+<p>The brain-fever bird and the koel call so seldom in September
+that their cries, when heard, cause surprise. The voice of the
+pied crested-cuckoo no longer falls upon the ear, nor does the
+song of the magpie-robin. The green barbets lift up their voices
+fairly frequently, but it is only on rare occasions that their
+cousins&mdash;the coppersmiths&mdash;hammer on their anvils. The pied
+mynas are far less vociferous than they were in July and August.</p>
+<a name="page156"></a>
+<p>By the end of September the bird chorus has assumed its winter
+form, except that the grey-headed flycatchers have not joined it
+in numbers.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from the sharp notes of the warblers, the cooing of the
+doves, the hooting of the crow-pheasants, the wailing of the
+kites, the cawing of the crows, the screaming of the green
+parrots, the chattering of the mynas and the seven sisters, the
+trumpeting of the sarus cranes and the clamouring of the
+lapwings, almost the only bird voices commonly heard are those
+of the fantail flycatcher, the amadavat, the wagtail, the
+oriole, the roller and the sunbird.</p>
+
+<p>The cock sunbirds are singing brilliantly although they are
+still wearing their workaday garments, which are quaker brown
+save for one purple streak along the median line of the breast
+and abdomen.</p>
+
+<p>Many birds are beginning to moult. They are casting off worn
+feathers and assuming the new ones that will keep them warm
+during the cool winter months. With most birds the new feathers
+grow as fast as the old ones fall out. In a few, however, the
+process of renewal does not keep pace with that of shedding; the
+result <a name="page157"></a>is that the moulting bird presents a mangy appearance.
+The mynas afford conspicuous examples of this; when moulting
+their necks often become almost nude, so that the birds bear
+some resemblance to miniature vultures.</p>
+
+<p>Great changes in the avifauna take place in September.</p>
+
+<p>The yellow-throated sparrows, the koels, the sunbirds, the
+bee-eaters, the red turtle-doves and the majority of the
+king-crows leave the Punjab. From the United Provinces there is
+a large exodus of brain-fever birds, koels, pied
+crested-cuckoos, paradise flycatchers and Indian orioles. These
+last are replaced by black-headed orioles in the United
+Provinces, but not in the Punjab.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the great autumnal immigration takes place
+throughout the month. Before September is half over the
+migratory wagtails begin to appear. Like most birds they travel
+by night when migrating. They arrive in silence, but on the
+morning of their coming the observer cannot fail to notice their
+cheerful little notes, which, like the hanging of the village
+smoke, are to be numbered among the signs of the approach of
+winter. The three species that visit India in the largest
+numbers <a name="page158"></a>are the white (<i>Motacilla alba</i>), the masked (<i>M.
+personata</i>) and the grey wagtail (<i>M. melanope</i>). In Bengal the
+first two are largely replaced by the white-faced wagtail (<i>M.
+leucopsis</i>). The names "white" and "grey" are not very happy
+ones. The white species is a grey bird with a white face and
+some black on the head and breast; the masked wagtail is very
+difficult to distinguish from the white species, differing in
+having less white and more black on the head and face, the white
+constituting the "mask"; the grey wagtail has the upper plumage
+greenish-grey and the lower parts sulphur-yellow. The three
+species arrive almost simultaneously, but the experience of the
+writer is that the grey bird usually comes a day or two before
+his cousins.</p>
+
+<p>On one of the last ten days of September the first batch of
+Indian redstarts (<i>Ruticilla frontalis</i>) reaches India. Within
+twenty days of the coming of these welcome little birds it is
+possible to dispense with punkas.</p>
+
+<p>Like the redstarts the rose-finches and minivets begin to pour
+into India towards the end of September. The snipe arrive daily
+throughout the month.</p>
+
+<p>With the first full moon of September <a name="page159"></a>come the grey quail
+(<i>Coturnix communis</i>). These, like the rain-quail, afford good
+sport with the gun if attracted by call birds set down
+overnight. When the stream of immigrating quail has ceased to
+flow, these birds spread themselves over the well-cropped
+country. It then becomes difficult to obtain a good bag of quail
+until the time of the spring harvest, when they collect in the
+crops that are still standing.</p>
+
+<p>Thousands of blue-winged teal invade India in September, but
+most of the other species of non-resident duck do not arrive
+until October or even November.</p>
+
+<p>Not the least important of the September arrivals are the
+migratory birds of prey. None of the owls seem to migrate. Nor
+do the vultures, but a large proportion of the diurnal raptores
+leaves the plains of India in the spring.</p>
+
+<p>To every migratory species of raptorial bird, that captures
+living quarry, there is a non-migratory counterpart or near
+relative. It would almost seem as if each species were broken up
+into two clans&mdash;a migratory and a stationary one. Thus, of each
+of the following pairs of birds the first-named is migratory and
+<a name="page160"></a>the other non-migratory: the steppe-eagle and the tawny eagle,
+the large Indian and the common kite, the long-legged and the
+white-eyed buzzard, the sparrow-hawk and the shikra, the
+peregrine and the lugger falcon, the common and the red-headed
+merlin, the kestrel and the black-winged kite.</p>
+
+<p>It is tempting to formulate the theory that the raptores are
+migratory or the reverse according or not as they prey on birds
+of passage, and that the former migrate merely in order to
+follow their quarry. Certain facts seem to bear out this theory.
+The peregrine falcon, which feeds largely on ducks, is
+migratory, while the lugger falcon&mdash;a bird not particularly
+addicted to waterfowl&mdash;remains in India throughout the year.</p>
+
+<p>The necessity of following their favourite quarry may account
+for the migratory habits of some birds of prey, but it does not
+apply to all. Thus, the osprey, which feeds almost exclusively
+on fish, is merely a winter visitor to India. Again, there is
+the kestrel. This preys on non-migratory rats and mice,
+nevertheless it leaves the plains in the hot weather and goes to
+the Himalayas to breed. All the species of birds of prey cited
+above as <a name="page161"></a>migratory begin to arrive in the plains of India in
+September. The merlins come only into the Punjab, but most of
+the other raptores spread over the whole of India.</p>
+
+<p>The various species of harrier make their appearance in
+September. These are birds that cannot fail to attract
+attention. They usually fly slowly a few feet above the surface
+of the earth so that they can drop suddenly on their quarry.
+They squat on the ground when resting, but their wings are long
+and their bodies light, so that they do not need much rest.
+Those who shoot duck have occasion often to say hard things of
+the marsh-harrier and the peregrine falcon, because these birds
+are apt to come as unbidden guests to the shoot and carry off
+wounded duck and teal before the <a href="#shikari"><i>shikari</i></a> has time to retrieve
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Of the migratory birds of prey the kestrel is perhaps the first
+to arrive; the osprey and the peregrine falcon are among the
+last.</p>
+
+<p>Very few observations of the comings and the goings of the
+various raptorial birds have been recorded; in the present state
+of our knowledge it is not possible to compile an accurate table
+showing the usual order in which the various species appear.
+This is a <a name="page162"></a>subject to which those persons who dwell permanently
+in one place might with advantage direct their attention.</p>
+
+<p>As regards nesting operations September is not a month of
+activity.</p>
+
+<p>On the 15th the close season for game birds ends in the
+Government forests; and by that date the great majority of them
+have reared up their broods. Grey partridge's eggs, it is true,
+have been taken in September; but as we have seen, grey
+partridges, like doves and kites, can scarcely be said to have a
+breeding season; they lay eggs whenever it seemeth good to them.</p>
+
+<p>A few belated peafowl may still be found with eggs, but these
+are exceptions. Most of the hens are strutting about proudly,
+accompanied by their chicks, while the cocks are shedding their
+trains. Other species of which the eggs may be found in the
+present month are the white-throated munia, the common and the
+large grey babblers, and, of course, the various species of
+dove.</p>
+
+<p>Before the last day of August all the young mynas have emerged
+from the egg, and throughout the first half of September numbers
+of them are to be seen following their parents <a name="page163"></a>and clamouring
+for food. Most of the koels have departed, but some individuals
+belonging to the rising generation remind us that they are still
+with us by emitting sounds which are very fair imitations of the
+"sqwaking" of young crows.</p>
+
+<p>Baby koels are as importunate as professional beggars and
+solicit food of every crow that passes by, to the great disgust
+of all but their foster-parents.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the seven sisters have done with nursery duties
+for a season. Some flocks, however, are still accompanied by
+impedimenta in the shape of young babblers or pied
+crested-cuckoos. The impedimenta make far more noise than the
+adult birds. They are always hungry, or at any rate always
+demanding food in squeaky tones. With each squeak the wings are
+flapped violently, as if to emphasise the demand. Every member
+of a flock appears to help to feed the young birds irrespective
+of whose nests these have been reared in.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout September bayas are to be seen at their nests, but,
+before the month draws to its close, nearly all the broods have
+come out into the great world. The nests will remain <a name="page164"></a>until next
+monsoon, or even longer, as monuments of sound workmanship.</p>
+
+<p>In September numbers of curious brown birds, heavily barred with
+black, make their appearance. These are crow-pheasants that have
+emerged from nests hidden away in dense thickets. In a few weeks
+these birds will lose their barred feathers and assume the black
+plumage and red wings of the adult. By the end of August most of
+the night-herons and those of the various species of egrets that
+have not been killed by the plume-hunters are able to
+congratulate themselves on having successfully reared up their
+broods. In September they lose their nuptial plumes.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page165"></a>
+<h3><a name="october">OCTOBER</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="october poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>Ye strangers, banished from your native glades,<br>
+ Where tyrant frost with famine leag'd proclaims<br>
+ "Who lingers dies"; with many a risk ye win<br>
+ The privilege to breathe our softer air<br>
+ And glean our sylvan berries.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ G<small>ISBORNE'S</small> <i>W<small>alks in a</small> F<small>orest</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>October in India differs from the English month in almost every
+respect. The one point of resemblance is that both are periods
+of falling temperature.</p>
+
+<p>In England autumn is the season for the departure of the
+migratory birds; in India it is the time of their arrival.</p>
+
+<p>The chief feature of the English October&mdash;the falling of the
+leaves&mdash;is altogether wanting in the Indian autumn.</p>
+
+<p>Spring is the season in which the pulse of life beats most
+vigorously both in Europe and in Asia; it is therefore at that
+time of year that the trees renew their garments.</p>
+
+<p>In England leaves are short-lived. After an existence of about
+six months they "curl up, become brown, and flutter from their
+<a name="page166"></a>sprays." In India they enjoy longer lives, and retain their
+greenness for the greater part of a year. A few Indian trees,
+as, for example, the shesham, lose their foliage in autumn; the
+silk-cotton and the coral trees part with their leaves gradually
+during the early months of the winter, but these are the
+exceptions; nearly all the trees retain their old leaves until
+the new ones appear in spring, so that, in this country, March,
+April and May are the months in which the dead leaves lie thick
+upon the ground.</p>
+
+<p>In many ways the autumn season in Northern India resembles the
+English spring. The Indian October may be likened to April in
+England. Both are months of hope, heralds of the most pleasant
+period of the year. In both the countryside is fresh and green.
+In both millions of avian visitors arrive.</p>
+
+<p>Like the English April, October in Northern India is welcome
+chiefly for that to which it leads. But it has merits of its
+own. Is not each of its days cooler than the preceding one? Does
+it not produce the joyous morn on which human beings awake to
+find that the hot weather is a thing of the past?</p>
+
+<p>Throughout October the sun's rays are hot, <a name="page167"></a>but, for an hour or
+two after dawn, especially in the latter half of the month, the
+climate leaves little to be desired. An outing in the early
+morning is a thing of joy, if it be taken while yet the air
+retains the freshness imparted to it by the night, and before
+the grass has yielded up the sparkling jewels acquired during
+the hours of darkness. It is good to ride forth on an October
+morn with the object of renewing acquaintance with nimble
+wagtails, sprightly redstarts, stately demoiselle cranes and
+other newly-returned migrants. In addition to meeting many
+winter visitors, the rider may, if he be fortunate, come upon a
+colony of sand-martins that has begun nesting operations.</p>
+
+<p>The husbandman enjoys very little leisure at this season of the
+year. From dawn till sunset he ploughs, or sows, or reaps, or
+threshes, or winnows.</p>
+
+<p>The early-sown rice yields the first-fruits of the <a href="#kharif"><i>kharif</i></a>
+harvest. By the end of the month it has disappeared before the
+sickle and many of the fields occupied by it have been sown with
+gram. The hemp (<i>san</i>) is the next crop to mature. In some parts
+of Northern India its vivid yellow flowers are <a name="page168"></a>the most
+conspicuous feature of the autumn landscape. They are as
+brilliantly coloured as broom. The <i>san</i> plant is not allowed to
+display its gilded blooms for long, it is cut down in the prime
+of life and cast into a village pond, there to soak. The
+harvesting of the various millets, the picking of the cotton,
+and the sowing of the wheat, barley, gram and poppy begin before
+the close of the month. The sugar-cane, the <a href="#arhar"><i>arhar</i></a> and the
+late-sown rice are not yet ready for the sickle. Those crops
+will be cut in November and December.</p>
+
+<p>As in September so in October the birds are less vociferous than
+they were in the spring and the hot weather. During the earlier
+part of the month the notes of the koel and the brain-fever bird
+are heard on rare occasions; before October has given place to
+November, these noisy birds cease to trouble. The pied starlings
+have become comparatively subdued, their joyful melody is no
+longer a notable feature of the avian chorus. In the first half
+of the month the green barbets utter their familiar cries at
+frequent intervals; as the weather grows colder they call less
+often, but at no season of the year do they cease <a name="page169"></a>altogether to
+raise their voices. The <i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i>, <i>tonk</i> of the
+coppersmith is rarely heard in October; during the greater part
+of the cold weather this barbet is a silent creature, reminding
+us of its presence now and then by calling out <i>wow</i> softly, as
+if half ashamed at the sound of its voice. The oriole now utters
+its winter note <i>tew</i>, and that sound is heard only
+occasionally.</p>
+
+<p>It is unnecessary to state that the perennials&mdash;the crows,
+kites, doves, bee-eaters, tree-pies, tailor-birds,
+cuckoo-shrikes, green parrots, jungle and spotted owlets&mdash;are
+noisy throughout the month.</p>
+
+<p>The king-crows no longer utter the soft notes which they seem to
+keep for the rainy season; but, before settling down to the
+sober delights of the winter, some individuals become almost as
+lively and vociferous as they were in the nesting season.
+Likewise some pairs of "blue jays" behave, in September and
+October, as though they were about to recommence courtship; they
+perform strange evolutions in the air and emit harsh cries, but
+these lead to nothing; after a few days of noisy behaviour the
+birds resume their more normal habits.</p>
+<a name="page170"></a>
+<p>The hoopoes have been silent for some time, but in October a few
+of them take up their refrain&mdash;<i>uk-uk-uk-uk</i>, and utter it with
+almost as much vigour as they did in March.</p>
+
+<p>It would thus seem that the change of season, the approach of
+winter, has a stimulating influence on king-crows, rollers and
+hoopoes, causing the energy latent within them suddenly to
+become active and to manifest itself in the form of song or
+dance.</p>
+
+<p>In October the pied chat and the wood-shrike frequently make
+sweet melody. Throughout the month the cock sunbirds sing as
+lustily and almost as brilliantly as canaries; many of them are
+beginning to reassume the iridescent purple plumage which they
+doffed some time ago. From every mango <a href="#tope">tope</a> emanates the
+cheerful lay of the fantail flycatcher and the lively "Think of
+me ... Never to be" of the grey-headed flycatcher. Amadavats
+sing sweet little songs without words as they flit about among
+the tall grasses.</p>
+
+<p>In the early morning and at eventide, the crow-pheasants give
+vent to their owl-like hoot, preceded by a curious guttural
+<i>kok-kok-kok</i>. The young ones, that left the nest some <a name="page171"></a>weeks
+ago, are rapidly losing their barred plumage and are assuming
+the appearance of the adult. By the middle of November very few
+immature crow-pheasants are seen.</p>
+
+<p>Migration and moulting are the chief events in the feathered
+world at the present season. The flood of autumn immigration,
+which arose as a tiny stream in August, and increased in volume
+nightly throughout September, becomes, in October, a mighty
+river on the bosom of which millions of birds are borne.</p>
+
+<p>Day by day the avian population of the <a href="#jhil"><i>jhils</i></a> increases. At the
+beginning of the month the garganey teal are almost the only
+migratory ducks to be seen on them. By the first of November
+brahminy duck, gadwall, common teal, widgeon, shovellers and the
+various species of pochard abound. With the duck come demoiselle
+cranes, curlews, storks, and sandpipers of various species. The
+geese and the pintail ducks, however, do not return to India
+until November. These are the last of the regular winter
+visitors to come and the first to go.</p>
+
+<p>The various kinds of birds of prey which began to appear in
+September continue to arrive throughout the present month.</p>
+<a name="page172"></a>
+<p>Grey-headed and red-breasted flycatchers, minivets, bush-chats,
+rose-finches and swallows pour into the plains from the
+Himalayas, while from beyond those mountains come redstarts,
+wagtails, starlings, buntings, blue-throats, quail and snipe.
+Along with the other migrants come numbers of rooks and
+jackdaws. These do not venture far into India; they confine
+themselves to the North-West Frontier Province and the Punjab,
+where they remain during the greater part of the winter. The
+exodus, from the above-mentioned Provinces, of the bee-eaters,
+sunbirds, yellow-throated sparrows, orioles, red turtle-doves
+and paradise flycatchers is complete by the end of October. The
+above are by no means the only birds that undergo local
+migration. The great majority of species probably move about in
+a methodical manner in the course of the year; a great deal of
+local migration is overlooked, because the birds that move away
+from a locality are replaced by others of their kind that come
+from other places.</p>
+
+<p>During a spell of exceptionally cold weather a great many
+Himalayan birds are driven by the snow into the plains of India,
+where they remain for a few days or weeks. Some of these
+<a name="page173"></a>migrants are noticed in the calendar for December.</p>
+
+<p>In October the annual moult of the birds is completed, so that,
+clothed in their warm new feathers, they are ready for winter
+some time before it comes. In the case of the redstart, the
+bush-chat, most of the wagtails, and some other species, the
+moult completely changes the colouring of the bird. The reason
+of this is that the edges of the new feathers are not of the
+same colour as the inner parts. Only the margins show, because
+the feathers of a bird overlap like slates on a roof, or the
+scales of a fish. After a time the edges of the new feathers
+become worn away, and then the differently-hued deeper parts
+begin to show, so that the bird gradually resumes the appearance
+it had before the moult. When the redstarts reach India in
+September most of the cocks are grey birds, because of the grey
+margins to their feathers; by the middle of April, when they
+begin to depart, many of them are black, the grey margins of the
+feathers having completely disappeared; other individuals are
+still grey because the margins of the feathers are broader or
+have not worn so much.</p>
+
+<p>October is the month in which the falconer <a name="page174"></a>sallies forth to
+secure the hawks which will be employed in "the sport of kings"
+during the cold weather. There are several methods of catching
+birds of prey, as indeed there are of capturing almost every
+bird and beast. The amount of poaching that goes on in this
+country is appalling, and, unless determined efforts are made to
+check it, there is every prospect of the splendid fauna of India
+being ruined. The sportsman is bound by all manner of
+restrictions, but the poacher is allowed to work his wicked will
+on the birds and beasts of the country, almost without let or
+hindrance.</p>
+
+<p>The apparatus usually employed for the capture of the peregrine,
+the shahin and other falcons is a well-limed piece of cane,
+about the length of the expanse of a falcon's wings. To the
+middle of this a dove, of which the eyelids have been sewn up,
+is tied. When a wild falcon appears on the scene the
+bird-catcher throws into the air the cane with the luckless dove
+attached to it. The dove flies about aimlessly, being unable to
+see, and is promptly pounced upon by the falcon, whose wings
+strike the limed cane and become stuck to it; then falcon and
+dove fall together to the <a name="page175"></a>ground, where they are secured by the
+bird-catcher.</p>
+
+<p>Another method largely resorted to is to tether a myna, or other
+small bird, to a peg driven into the ground, and to stretch
+before this a net, about three feet broad and six long, kept
+upright by means of two sticks inserted in the ground. Sooner or
+later a bird of prey will catch sight of the tethered bird,
+stoop to it, and become entangled in the net.</p>
+
+<p>A third device is to catch a buzzard and tie together some of
+the flight feathers of the wing, so that it can fly only with
+difficulty and cannot go far before it falls exhausted to the
+ground. To the feet of the bird of which the powers of flight
+have been thus curtailed a bundle of feathers is tied. Among the
+feathers several horsehair nooses are set. When a bird of prey,
+of the kind on which the falconer has designs, is seen the
+buzzard is thrown into the air. It flaps along heavily, and is
+immediately observed by the falcon, which thinks that the
+buzzard is carrying some heavy quarry in its talons. Now, the
+buzzard is a weakling among the raptores and all the other birds
+of prey despise it. Accordingly, the falcon, unmindful of the
+proverb <a name="page176"></a>which says that honesty is the best policy, swoops down
+on the buzzard with intent to commit larceny, and becomes
+entangled in the nooses. Then both buzzard and falcon fall to
+the ground, struggling violently. All that the bird-catcher has
+to do now is to walk up and secure his prize.</p>
+
+<p>October marks the beginning of a lull in the nesting activities
+of birds, a lull that lasts until February. As we have seen, the
+nesting season of the birds that breed in the rains ends in
+September, nevertheless a few belated crow-pheasants, sarus
+cranes and weaver-birds are often to be found in October still
+busy with nestlings, or even with eggs; the latter usually prove
+to be addled, and this explains the late sitting of the parent.
+October, however, is the month in which the nesting season of
+the black-necked storks (<i>Xenorhynchus asiaticus</i>) begins, if
+the monsoon has been a normal one and the rains have continued
+until after the middle of September. This bird begins to nest
+shortly after the monsoon rains have ceased. Hard-set eggs have
+been taken in the beginning of September and as late as 27th
+December. Most eggs are laid during the month of October. The
+nest is a large <a name="page177"></a>saucer-shaped platform of twigs and sticks. Hume
+once found one "fully six feet long and three broad." The nest
+is usually lined with grass or some soft material and is built
+high up in a tree. The normal number of eggs is four, these are
+of a dirty white hue.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page178"></a>
+<h3><a name="november">NOVEMBER</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="november poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>It is the very carnival of nature,<br>
+ The loveliest season that the year can show!<br>
+ <br>
+ *
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*<br>
+ <br>
+ The gently sighing breezes, as they blow,<br>
+ Have more than vernal softness. . . .</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ B<small>ERNARD</small> B<small>ARTON</small>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The climate of Northern India is one of extremes. Six months ago
+European residents were seeking in vain suitable epithets of
+disapprobation to apply to the weather; to-day they are trying
+to discover appropriate words to describe the charm of November.
+It is indeed strange that no poet has yet sung the praises of
+the perfect climate of the present month.</p>
+
+<p>The cold weather of Northern India is not like any of the
+English seasons. Expressed in terms of the British climate it is
+a dry summer, warmest at the beginning and the end, in which the
+birds have forgotten to nest.</p>
+
+<p>The delights of the Indian winter are enhanced <a name="page179"></a>for the
+Englishman by the knowledge that, while he lives beneath a
+cloudless sky and enjoys genial sunshine, his fellow-men in
+England dwell under leaden clouds and endure days of fog, and
+mist, and rain, and sleet, and snow. In England the fields are
+bare and the trees devoid of leaves; in India the countryside
+wears a summer aspect.</p>
+
+<p>The sowings of the spring cereals are complete by the fifteenth
+of November; those of the tobacco, poppy and potato continue
+throughout the month. By the beginning of December most of the
+fields are covered by an emerald carpet.</p>
+
+<p>The picking of the cotton begins in the latter part of October,
+with the result that November is a month of hard toil for the
+ponies that have to carry the heavy loads of cotton from the
+fields into the larger towns. By the middle of the month all the
+<i>san</i> has been cut and the water-nuts have been gathered in.
+Then the pressing of the sugar-cane begins in earnest. The
+little presses that for eight months have been idle are once
+again brought into use, and, from mid-November until the end of
+January, the patient village oxen work them, tramping <a name="page180"></a>in circles
+almost without interruption throughout the short hours of
+daylight.</p>
+
+<p>The custard-apples are ripening; the cork trees are white with
+pendent jasmine-like flowers, and the loquat trees&mdash;the happy
+hunting ground of flocks of blithe little white-eyes&mdash;put forth
+their inconspicuous but strongly scented blossoms. Gay
+chrysanthemums are the most conspicuous feature of the garden.
+The shesham and the silk-cotton trees are fast losing their
+leaves, but all the other trees are covered with foliage.</p>
+
+<p>The birds revel, like man, in the perfect conditions afforded by
+the Indian winter; indeed, the fowls of the air are affected by
+climate to a greater extent than man is.</p>
+
+<p>Those that winter in England suffer considerable hardship and
+privation, while those that spend the cold weather in India
+enjoy life to the uttermost.</p>
+
+<p>Consider the birds, how they fare on a winter's day in England
+when there is a foot of snow lying on the ground and the keen
+east wind whistles through the branches of the trees. In the lee
+of brick walls, hayricks and thick hedges groups of disconsolate
+birds stand, seeking some shelter from the piercing <a name="page181"></a>wind. The
+hawthorn berries have all been eaten. Insect food there is none;
+it is only in the summer time that the comfortable hum of
+insects is heard in England. Thus the ordinary food supply of
+the fowls of the air is greatly restricted, and scores of
+field-fares and other birds die of starvation. The snow-covered
+lawn in front of every house, of which the inmates are in the
+habit of feeding the birds, is the resort of many feathered
+things. Along with the robins and sparrows&mdash;habitual recipients
+of the alms of man&mdash;are blackbirds, thrushes, tits, starlings,
+chaffinches, rooks, jackdaws and others, which in fair weather
+avoid, or scorn to notice, man. These have become tamed by the
+cold, and, they stand on the snow, cold, forlorn and
+half-starved&mdash;a miserable company of supplicants for food.
+Throughout the short cold winter days scarcely a bird note is
+heard; the fowls of the air are in no mood for song.</p>
+
+<p>Contrast the behaviour of the birds on a winter's day in India.
+In every garden scores of them lead a joyful existence. Little
+flocks of minivets display their painted wings as they flit
+hither and thither, hunting insects on the leaves of trees. Amid
+the foliage warblers, <a name="page182"></a>wood-shrikes, bulbuls, tree-pies, orioles
+and white-eyes busily seek for food. Pied and golden-backed
+woodpeckers, companies of nuthatches, and, here and there, a
+wryneck move about on the trunks and branches, looking into
+every cranny for insects. King-crows, bee-eaters, fantail and
+grey-headed flycatchers seek their quarry on the wing, making
+frequent sallies into the open from their leafy bowers.
+Butcher-birds, rollers and white-breasted kingfishers secure
+their victims on the ground, dropping on to them silently from
+their watchtowers. Magpie-robins, Indian robins, redstarts and
+tailor-birds likewise capture their prey on the ground, but,
+instead of waiting patiently for it to come to them, they hop
+about fussily in quest of it. Bright sunbirds flit from bloom to
+bloom, now hovering in the air on rapidly-vibrating wings, now
+dipping their slender curved bills into the calyces.</p>
+
+<p>On the lawn wagtails run nimbly in search of tiny insects,
+hoopoes probe the earth for grubs, mynas strut about, in company
+with king-crows and starlings, seeking for grasshoppers.</p>
+
+<p>Overhead, swifts and swallows dash joyously to and fro, feasting
+on the minute <a name="page183"></a>flying things that are found in the air even on
+the coolest days. Above them, kites wheel and utter plaintive
+cries. Higher still, vultures soar in grim silence. Flocks of
+emerald paroquets fly past&mdash;as swift as arrows shot from
+bows&mdash;seeking grain or fruit.</p>
+
+<p>In the shady parts of the garden crow-pheasants look for snakes
+and other crawling things, seven sisters rummage among the
+fallen leaves for insects, and rose-finches pick from off the
+ground the tiny seeds on which they feed.</p>
+
+<p>The fields and open plains swarm with larks, pipits,
+finch-larks, lapwings, plovers, quail, buntings, mynas, crows,
+harriers, buzzards, kestrels, and a score of other birds.</p>
+
+<p>But it is at the <a href="#jhil"><i>jhils</i></a> that bird life seems most abundant. On
+some tanks as many as sixty different kinds of winged things may
+be counted. There are the birds that swim in the deep water&mdash;the
+ducks, teal, dabchicks, cormorants and snake-birds; the birds
+that run about on the floating leaves of water-lilies and other
+aquatic plants&mdash;the jacanas, water-pheasants and wagtails; the
+birds that wade in the shallow water and feed on frogs or
+creatures that lurk hidden in the mud&mdash;the <a name="page184"></a>herons, paddy-birds,
+storks, cranes, pelicans, whimbrels, curlews, ibises and
+spoonbills; the birds that live among sedges and reeds&mdash;the
+snipe, reed-warblers, purple coots and water-rails. Then there
+are the birds that fly overhead&mdash;the great kite-like ospreys
+that frequently check their flight to drop into the water with a
+big splash, in order to secure a fish; the kingfishers that dive
+so neatly as barely to disturb the smooth surface of the lake
+when they enter and leave it; the graceful terns that pick their
+food off the face of the <i>jhil</i>; the swifts and swallows that
+feed on the insects which always hover over still water.</p>
+
+<p>Go where we will, be it to the sun-steeped garden, the shady
+mango grove, the dusty road, the grassy plain, the fallow field,
+or among the growing crops, there do we find bird life in
+abundance and food in plenty to support it.</p>
+
+<p>This is not the breeding season, therefore the bird choir is not
+at its best, nevertheless the feathered folk everywhere proclaim
+the pleasure of existence by making a joyful noise. From the
+crowded <i>jhil</i> emanate the sweet twittering of the wagtails, the
+clanging <a name="page185"></a>call of the geese, the sibilant note of the whistling
+teal, the curious <i>a-onk</i> of the brahminy ducks, the mewing of
+the jacanas and the quacking of many kinds of ducks. Everywhere
+in the fields and the groves are heard the cawing of the crows,
+the wailing of the kites, the cooing of the doves, the
+twittering of the sparrows, the crooning of the white-eyes, the
+fluting of the wood-shrikes, the tinkling of the bulbuls, the
+chattering of the mynas, the screaming of the green parrots, the
+golden-backed woodpeckers and the white-breasted kingfishers,
+the mingled harmony and discord of the tree-pies, the sharp
+monosyllabic notes of the various warblers, the melody of the
+sunbirds and the flycatchers. The green barbets also call
+spasmodically throughout the month, chiefly in the early morning
+and the late afternoon, but the only note uttered by the
+coppersmith is a soft <i>wow</i>. The hoopoe emits occasionally a
+spasmodic <i>uk-uk-uk</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The migrating birds continue to pour into India during the
+earlier part of November. The geese are the last to arrive, they
+begin to come before the close of October, and, from the second
+week of November onwards, <a name="page186"></a>V-shaped flocks of these fine birds
+may be seen or heard overhead at any hour of the day or night.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting activities of the fowls of the air are at their
+lowest ebb in November. Some thirty species are known to rear up
+young in the present month as opposed to five hundred in May. In
+the United Provinces the only nest which the ornithologist can
+be sure of finding is that of the white-backed vulture.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the amadavats are still nesting. Most of the eggs laid
+by these birds in the rains yielded young ones in September, but
+it often happens that the brood does not emerge from the eggs
+until the end of October, with the result that in the earlier
+part of the present month parties of baby amadavats are to be
+seen enjoying the first days of their aerial existence. A few
+black-necked storks do not lay until November; thus there is
+always the chance of coming upon an incubating stork in the
+present month. Here and there a grey partridge's nest containing
+eggs may be found. As has been said, the nesting season of this
+species is not well-defined.</p>
+
+<p>The quaint little thick-billed mites known as white-throated
+munias (<i>Munia malabarica</i>) <a name="page187"></a>are also very irregular as to their
+nesting habits. Their eggs have been taken in every month of the
+year except June.</p>
+
+<p>In some places Indian sand-martins are busy at their nests, but
+the breeding season of the majority of these birds does not
+begin until January.</p>
+
+<p>Pallas's fishing-eagle is another species of which the eggs are
+likely to be found in the present month. If a pair of these
+birds have a nest they betray the fact to the world by the
+unmusical clamour they make from sunrise to sunset.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting season of the tawny eagle or wokab (<i>Aquila
+vindhiana</i>) begins in November. The nest is a typical raptorial
+one, being a large platform of sticks. It may attain a length of
+three feet and it is usually as broad as it is long; it is about
+six inches in depth. It is generally lined with leaves,
+sometimes with straw or grass and a few feathers. It is placed
+at the summit of a tree. Two eggs are usually laid. These are
+dirty white, more or less speckled with brown. The young ones
+are at first covered with white down; in this respect they
+resemble baby birds of prey of other species. The man who
+attempts to take the <a name="page188"></a>eggs or young of this eagle must be
+prepared to ward off the attack of the female, who, as is usual
+among birds of prey, is larger, bolder and more powerful than
+the male. At Lahore the writer saw a tawny eagle stoop at a man
+who had climbed a tree and secured the eagle's eggs. She seized
+his turban and flew off with it, having inflicted a scratch on
+his head. For the recovery of his turban the egg-lifter had to
+thank a pair of kites that attacked the eagle and caused her to
+drop that article while defending herself from their onslaught.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page189"></a>
+<h3><a name="december">DECEMBER</a></h3>
+<table width="100%" summary="december poem">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="20%"></td>
+ <td width="60%">
+ <small>Striped squirrels raced; the mynas perked and pricked,<br>
+ The seven sisters chattered in the thorn,<br>
+ The pied fish-tiger hung above the pool,<br>
+ The egrets stalked among the buffaloes,<br>
+ The kites sailed circles in the golden air;<br>
+ About the painted temple peacocks flew.</small></td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right">
+ A<small>RNOLD</small>. <i>T<small>he</small> L<small>ight of</small> A<small>sia</small></i>.</td>
+ <td></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>In the eyes of the Englishman December in Northern India is a
+month of halcyon days, of days dedicated to sport under perfect
+climatic conditions, of bright sparkling days spent at the duck
+tank, at the snipe <a href="#jhil"><i>jhil</i></a>, in the <i>sal</i> forest, or among the
+Siwaliks, days on which office files rest in peace, and the gun,
+the rifle and the rod are made to justify their existence. Most
+Indians, unfortunately, hold a different opinion of December.
+These love not the cool wind that sweeps across the plains. To
+them the rapid fall of temperature at sunset is apt to spell
+pneumonia.</p>
+
+<p>The average villager is a hot-weather organism. He is content
+with thin cotton <a name="page190"></a>clothing which he wears year in year out,
+whether the mercury in the thermometer stand at 115&deg; or
+32&deg;. However, many of the better-educated Indians have
+learned from Englishmen how to protect themselves against cold;
+we may therefore look forward to the time when even the poorest
+Indian will be able to enjoy the health-bringing, bracing
+climate of the present month.</p>
+
+<p>By the 1st December the last of the spring crops has been sown,
+most of the cotton has been picked, and the husbandmen are busy
+cutting and pressing the sugar-cane and irrigating the poppy and
+the <a href="#rabi"><i>rabi</i></a> cereals.</p>
+
+<p>The crop-sown area is covered with a garment that, seen from a
+little distance, appears to be made of emerald velvet. Its
+greenness is intensified by contrast with the dried-up grass on
+the grazing lands. In many places the mustard crop has begun to
+flower; the bright yellow blooms serve to enliven the somewhat
+monotonous landscape. In the garden the chrysanthemums and the
+loquat trees are still in flower; the poinsettias put forth
+their showy scarlet bracts and the roses and violets begin to
+produce their fragrant flowers.</p>
+<a name="page191"></a>
+<p>The bird choir is composed of comparatively few voices. Of the
+seasonal choristers the grey-headed flycatchers are most often
+heard. The fantail flycatchers occasionally sing their cheerful
+lay, but at this season they more often emit a plaintive call,
+as if they were complaining of the cold.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the sunbirds are still in undress plumage; a few have
+not yet come into song, these give vent only to harsh scolding
+notes. From the thicket emanate sharp sounds&mdash;<i>tick-tick</i>,
+<i>chee-chee</i>, <i>chuck-chuck</i>, <i>chiff-chaff</i>; these are the calls
+of the various warblers that winter with us. Above the open
+grass-land the Indian skylarks are singing at Heaven's gate;
+these birds avoid towns and groves and gardens, in consequence
+their song is apt to be overlooked by human beings. Very
+occasionally the oriole utters a disconsolate-sounding <i>tew</i>; he
+is a truly tropical bird; it is only when the sun flames
+overhead out of a brazen sky that he emits his liquid notes.
+Here and there a hoopoe, more vigorous than his fellows, croons
+softly&mdash;<i>uk</i>, <i>uk</i>, <i>uk</i>. The coppersmith now and then gives
+forth his winter note&mdash;a subdued <i>wow</i>; this is heard chiefly at
+the sunset hour.</p>
+<a name="page192"></a>
+<p>The green barbet calls spasmodically throughout December, but,
+as a rule, only in the afternoon. Towards the end of the month
+some of the nuthatches and the robins begin to tune up. On
+cloudy days the king-crows utter the soft calls that are usually
+associated with the rainy season.</p>
+
+<p>December, like November, although climatically very pleasant, is
+a month in which the activities of the feathered folk are at a
+comparatively low ebb. The cold, however, sends to India
+thousands of immigrants. Most of these spend the whole winter in
+the plains of India. Of such are the redstart, the grey-headed
+flycatcher, the snipe and the majority of the game birds.
+Besides these regular migrants there are many species which
+spend a few days or weeks in the plains, leaving the Himalayas
+when the weather there becomes very inclement. Thus the
+ornithologist in the plains of Northern India lives in a state
+of expectancy from November to January. Every time he walks in
+the fields he hopes to see some uncommon winter visitor. It may
+be a small-billed mountain thrush, a blue rock-thrush, a
+wall-creeper, a black bulbul, a flycatcher-warbler, a
+green-backed tit, a <a name="page193"></a>verditer flycatcher, a black-throated or a
+grey-winged ouzel, a dark-grey bush-chat, a pine-bunting, a
+Himalayan whistling thrush, or even a white-capped redstart.
+Indeed, there is scarcely a species which inhabits the lower
+ranges of the Himalayas that may not be driven to the plains by
+a heavy fall of snow on the mountains. Naturally it is in the
+districts nearest the hills that most of these rare birds are
+seen&mdash;but there is no part of Northern India in which they may
+not occur.</p>
+
+<p>The nesting activity of birds in Upper India attains its zenith
+in May, and then declines until it reaches its nadir in
+November. With December it begins again to increase.</p>
+
+<p>Of those birds whose nests were described last month the
+white-backed vulture, Pallas's fishing-eagle, the tawny eagle,
+the sand-martin and the black-necked stork are likely to be
+found with eggs or young in the present month.</p>
+
+<p>December marks the beginning of the nesting season for three
+large owls&mdash;the brown fish-owl, the rock horned-owl and the
+dusky horned-owl. The brown fish-owl (<i>Ketupa ceylonensis</i>) is a
+bird almost as large as a kite. <a name="page194"></a>It has bright orange orbs and
+long, pointed aigrettes. Its legs are devoid of feathers.
+According to Blanford it has a dismal cry like <i>haw</i>, <i>haw</i>,
+<i>haw</i>, <i>ho</i>. "Eha" describes the call as a ghostly hoot&mdash;a <i>hoo
+hoo hoo</i>, far-reaching, but coming from nowhere in particular.
+These two descriptions do not seem to agree. There is nothing
+unusual in this.</p>
+
+<p>The descriptions of the calls of the nocturnal birds of prey
+given by India ornithologists are notoriously unsatisfactory.
+This is perhaps not surprising when we consider the wealth of
+bird life in this country. It is no easy matter to ascertain the
+perpetrators of the various sounds of the night, and, when the
+naturalist has succeeded in fixing the author of any call, he
+finds himself confronted with the difficult task of describing
+the sound in question. Bearing in mind the way in which human
+interjections baffle the average writer, we cannot be surprised
+at the poor success that crowns the endeavours of the naturalist
+to syllabise bird notes.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the call of the brown fish-owl the writer has been
+trying for the past three or four years to determine by
+observation which of the many nocturnal noises are to be
+<a name="page195"></a>ascribed to this species. With this object he kept one of these
+owls captive for several weeks; the bird steadfastly refused to
+utter a sound. One hoot would have purchased its liberty; but
+the bird would not pay the price: it sulked and hissed. The bird
+in question, although called a fish-owl, does not live chiefly
+on fish. Like others of its kind it feeds on birds, rats and
+mice. Hume found in the nest of this species two quails, a
+pigeon, a dove and a myna, each with the head, neck and breast
+eaten away, but with the wings, back, feet and tail remaining
+almost intact. "Eha" has seen the bird stoop on a hare. The
+individual kept by the writer throve on raw meat. This owl is
+probably called the fish-owl because it lives near rivers and
+tanks and invariably nests in the vicinity of water. The nest
+may be in a tree or on a ledge in a cliff. Sometimes the bird
+utilises the deserted cradle of a fishing-eagle or vulture. The
+structure which the bird itself builds is composed of sticks and
+feathers and, occasionally, a few dead leaves. Two white eggs
+are laid. The breeding season lasts from December to March.</p>
+
+<p>The rock horned-owl (<i>Bubo bengalensis</i>) is of <a name="page196"></a>the same size as
+the fish-owl, and, like the latter, has aigrettes and
+orange-yellow orbs, but its legs are feathered to the toes. This
+owl feeds on snakes, rats, mice, birds, lizards, crabs, and even
+large insects. "A loud dissyllabic hoot" is perhaps as good a
+description of its call as can be given in words. This species
+breeds from December to April. March is the month in which the
+eggs are most likely to be found. The nesting site is usually a
+ledge on some cliff overhanging water. A hollow is scooped out
+in the ledge, and, on the bare earth, four white eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>The dusky horned-owl (<i>Bubo coromandus</i>) may be distinguished
+from the rock-horned species by the paler, greyer plumage, and
+by the fact that its eyes are deep yellow, rather than orange.
+Its cry has been described as <i>wo</i>, <i>wo</i>, <i>wo</i>, <i>wo-o-o</i>. The
+writer would rather represent it as <i>ur-r-r</i>, <i>ur-r-r</i>,
+<i>ur-r-r-r-r</i>&mdash;a low grunting sound not unlike the call of the
+red turtle-dove. This owl is very partial to crows. Mr. Cripps
+once found fifteen heads of young crows in a nest belonging to
+one of these birds. December and January are the months in which
+to look for the nest, which is a platform <a name="page197"></a>of sticks placed in a
+fork of a large tree. Two eggs are laid.</p>
+
+<p>The breeding season for Bonelli's eagle (<i>Hieraetus fasciatus</i>)
+begins in December. The eyrie of this fine bird is described in
+the calendar for January.</p>
+
+<p>In the Punjab many ravens build their nests during the present
+month.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout January, February and the early part of March ravens'
+nests containing eggs or young are likely to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Ordinarily the nesting season of the common kite (<i>Milvus
+govinda</i>) does not begin until February, but as the eggs of this
+bird have been taken as early as the 29th December, mention of
+it must be made in the calendar for the present month. A similar
+remark applies to the hoopoe (<i>Upupa indica</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Doves nest in December, as they do in every other month.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally a colony of cliff-swallows (<i>Hirundo flavicolla</i>)
+takes time by the forelock and begins to build one of its
+honeycomb-like congeries of nests in December. This species was
+dealt with in the calendar for February.</p>
+
+<p>Blue rock-pigeons mostly nest at the beginning of the hot
+weather. Hume, however, <a name="page198"></a>states that some of these birds breed as
+early as Christmas Day. Mr. P. G. S. O'Connor records the
+finding of a nest even earlier than that. The nest in question
+was in a weir of a canal. The weir was pierced by five round
+holes, each about nine inches in diameter. Through four of these
+the water was rushing, but the fifth was blocked by debris, and
+on this a pair of pigeons had placed their nest.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="page199"></a>
+<h3><a name="glossary">GLOSSARY</a></h3>
+<br>
+<table width="100%" summary="glossary of hindi words">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="arhar"><i>Arhar</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ A leguminous crop plant which attains a height of four
+ feet or more.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="chik"><i>Chik</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ A curtain composed of a number of very thin strips of
+ wood. Chiks are hung in front of doors and windows in India with
+ the object of keeping out insects, but not air.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="holi"><i>Holi</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ A Hindu festival.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="jhil"><i>Jhil</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ A lake or any natural depression which is filled with
+ rain-water at all or in certain seasons.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="kharif"><i>Kharif</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Autumn. Rice and other crops which are reaped in
+ autumn are called <i>kharif</i> crops. Crops such as wheat which are
+ cut in spring are called <i>rabi</i> crops. Two crops (sometimes
+ three) are raised in India annually.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="megas"><i>Megas</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Sugar-cane from which the juice has been extracted.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="rabi"><i>Rabi</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Spring. See <a href="#kharif"><i>Kharif</i></a>.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="shikari"><i>Shikari</i></a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ One who goes hunting or shooting.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ <a name="tope"><i>Tope</i></a>.
+ </td>
+ <td valign="top">
+ A term applied to a grove of mango trees, artificially
+ planted. Thousands of such topes exist in Northern India. In
+ some places they are quite a feature of the landscape.<br><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3><a name="index">INDEX</a></h3>
+<br>
+Amadavat. <i>See</i> <a href="#munia">Red munia</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="babbler"></a>
+Babbler, common (<i>Crateropus canorus</i>),
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page49">49,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162,</a>
+<a href="#page163">163,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;large grey (<i>Argya malcomi</i>),
+<a href="#page162">162</a><br>
+<br>
+Barbet, green (<i>Thereiceryx zeylonicus</i>),
+<a href="#page7">7,</a>
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page66">66,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page155">155,</a>
+<a href="#page168">168,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185,</a>
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+<br>
+Baya. <i>See</i> <a href="#weaverbird">Weaver-bird</a><br>
+<br>
+Bee-eater,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page74">74,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page125">125,</a>
+<a href="#page139">139,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+&mdash;blue-tailed (<i>Merops philippinus</i>),
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+&mdash;little green (<i>M. viridis</i>),
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+<br>
+Blue Jay. <i>See</i> <a href="#roller">Roller</a><br>
+<br>
+Blue-throat,
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+<br>
+Brain-fever bird. <i>See</i> <a href="#cuckoo">Hawk-cuckoo</a><br>
+<br>
+Bulbul,
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page107">107,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;Bengal (<i>Molpastes bengalensis</i>),
+<a href="#page47">47</a><br>
+&mdash;black (<i>Hypsipetes psaroides</i>),
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+&mdash;red-whiskered (<i>Otocompsa emeria</i>),
+<a href="#page46">46</a><br>
+<br>
+Bunting,
+<a href="#page40">40,</a>
+<a href="#page41">41,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;black-headed (<i>Emberiza melanocephala</i>),
+<a href="#page41">41</a><br>
+&mdash;pine (<i>Emberiza leucocephala</i>),
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+&mdash;red-headed (<i>Emberiza luteola</i>),
+<a href="#page41">41</a><br>
+<br>
+Buzzard,
+<a href="#page175">175,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;long-legged (<i>Buteo ferox</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+&mdash;white-eyed (<i>Butastur teesa</i>),
+<a href="#page30">30,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page69">69,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Chat,
+<a href="#page3">3</a><br>
+&mdash;brown-rock (<i>Cercomela fuscus</i>),
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page70">70,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138</a><br>
+&mdash;dark grey bush (<i>Oreicola ferrea</i>),
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+&mdash;Indian bush (<i>Pratincola maura</i>),
+<a href="#page42">42,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page173">173</a><br>
+&mdash;pied bush (<i>Pratincola caprata</i>),
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page74">74,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170</a><br>
+<br>
+Coot, common (<i>Fulica atra</i>),
+<a href="#page135">135</a><br>
+&mdash;purple (<i>Porphyrio poliocephalus</i>),
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page146">146,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+Coppersmith or crimson-breasted barbet (<i>Xantholaema
+haematocephala</i>),
+<a href="#page7">7,</a>
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page23">23,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page66">66,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+<br>
+Cormorant,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Crane,
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;demoiselle (<i>Anthropoides virgo</i>),
+<a href="#page167">167,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+&mdash;sarus (<i>Grus antigone</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page98">98,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page143">143,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page176">176</a><br>
+<br>
+Creeper, wall,
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+<br>
+Crow,
+<a href="#page13">13,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page69">69,</a>
+<a href="#page119">119,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;black, or jungle crow or corby (<i>Corvus macrorhynchus</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page25">25,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+&mdash;house (<i>Corvus splendens</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page113">113,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page125">125,</a>
+<a href="#page141">141,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162</a><br>
+<br>
+Crow-pheasant or coucal (<i>Centropus sinensis</i>),
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page112">112,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page164">164,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page176">176,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="cuckoo"></a>
+Cuckoo, European (<i>Cuculus canorus</i>),
+<a href="#page66">66,</a>
+<a href="#page80">80</a><br>
+&mdash;hawk (<i>Hierococcyx varius</i>),
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page49">49,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page84">84,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page155">155,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page168">168</a><br>
+&mdash;Indian (<i>Cuculus micropterus</i>),
+<a href="#page85">85,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138</a><br>
+&mdash;pied crested (<i>Coccystes jacobinus</i>),
+<a href="#page114">114,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page155">155,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page163">163</a><br>
+&mdash;sirkeer (<i>Taccocua leschenaulti</i>),
+<a href="#page124">124</a><br>
+<br>
+Cuckoo-shrike (<i>Grauculus macii</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page51">51,</a>
+<a href="#page52">52,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169</a><br>
+<br>
+Curlew,
+<a href="#page171">171,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="dabchick"></a>
+Dabchick, or little grebe (<i>Podiceps albipennis</i>),
+<a href="#page150">150,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Darter. <i>See</i> <a href="#snakebird">Snake-bird</a><br>
+<br>
+Dhayal. <i>See</i> <a href="#robin">Magpie-robin</a><br>
+<br>
+Did-he-do-it. <i>See</i> <a href="#lapwing">Red-wattled lapwing</a><br>
+<br>
+Dove,
+<a href="#page8">8,</a>
+<a href="#page9">9,</a>
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page54">54,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page174">174,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;little brown (<i>Turtur cambayensis</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5</a><br>
+&mdash;red turtle (<i>Oenopopelia tranquebarica</i>),
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+&mdash;ring (<i>Turtur risorius</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5</a><br>
+&mdash;spotted (<i>Turtur suratensis</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="drongo"></a>
+Drongo or king-crow (<i>Dicrurus ater</i>),
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page38">38,</a>
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page77">77,</a>
+<a href="#page90">90,</a>
+<a href="#page107">107,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="duck"></a>
+Duck,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page146">146,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;brahminy (<i>Casarca rutila</i>),
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;comb or nukta (<i>Sarcidiornis melanotus</i>),
+<a href="#page115">115,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page143">143,</a>
+<a href="#page149">149</a><br>
+&mdash;gadwall (<i>Chaulelasmus streperus</i>),
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+&mdash;mallard (<i>Anas boscas</i>),
+<a href="#page64">64</a><br>
+&mdash;pintail (<i>Dafila acuta</i>),
+<a href="#page41">41,</a>
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+&mdash;pochard (<i>Netta ferina</i>),
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+&mdash;shoveller (<i>Spatula clypeata</i>),
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+&mdash;spot-billed (<i>Anas poecilorhyncha</i>),
+<a href="#page134">134,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135</a><br>
+&mdash;widgeon (<i>Mareca penelope</i>),
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Eagle,
+<a href="#page21">21</a><br>
+&mdash;Bonelli's (<i>Hieraetus fasciatus</i>),
+<a href="#page10">10,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page197">197</a><br>
+&mdash;Pallas's fishing (<i>Haliaetus leucoryphus</i>),
+<a href="#page11">11,</a>
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page187">187,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+&mdash;steppe (<i>Aquila bifasciata</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+&mdash;tawny (<i>Aquila vindhiana</i>),
+<a href="#page11">11,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page160">160,</a>
+<a href="#page187">187,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+<br>
+Egret,
+<a href="#page99">99,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page134">134,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+&mdash;cattle (<i>Bubulcus coromandus</i>),
+<a href="#page100">100,</a>
+<a href="#page151">151</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Falcon, lugger (<i>Falco jugger</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+&mdash;peregrine (<i>Falco peregrinus</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160,</a>
+<a href="#page161">161,</a>
+<a href="#page174">174</a><br>
+&mdash;shahin (<i>Falco peregrinator</i>),
+<a href="#page174">174</a><br>
+<br>
+Finch, rose (<i>Carpodacus erythrinus</i>),
+<a href="#page158">158,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Finch-lark, ashy-crowned (<i>Pyrrhulauda grisea</i>),
+<a href="#page28">28,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page56">56,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Flycatcher,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;fantail (<i>Rhipidura albifrontata</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page29">29,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page125">125,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+&mdash;grey-headed (<i>Culicicapa ceylonensis</i>),
+<a href="#page6">6,</a>
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page42">42,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191,</a>
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+&mdash;paradise (<i>Terpsiphone paradisi</i>),
+<a href="#page42">42,</a>
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page77">77,</a>
+<a href="#page92">92,</a>
+<a href="#page107">107,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+&mdash;red-breasted (<i>Siphia albicilla</i>),
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+&mdash;verditer (<i>Stoparola melanops</i>),
+<a href="#page42">42,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Gadwall. <i>See</i> <a href="#duck">Duck</a><br>
+<br>
+Goatsucker. <i>See</i> <a href="#nightjar">Nightjar</a><br>
+<br>
+Goose,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;grey-lag (<i>Anser ferus</i>),
+<a href="#page41">41</a><br>
+<br>
+Grebe. <i>See</i> <a href="#dabchick">Dabchick</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Harrier,
+<a href="#page161">161,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Hawk, sparrow,
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="heron"></a>
+Heron,
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;night (<i>Nycticorax griseus</i>),
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page113">113,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+&mdash;pond, or paddy-bird (<i>Ardeola grayii</i>),
+<a href="#page99">99,</a>
+<a href="#page113">113,</a>
+<a href="#page134">134,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+Honeysucker. <i>See</i> <a href="#sunbird">Sunbird</a><br>
+<br>
+Hoopoe (<i>Upupa indica</i>),
+<a href="#page7">7,</a>
+<a href="#page17">17,</a>
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page23">23,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page97">97,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191,</a>
+<a href="#page197">197</a><br>
+<br>
+Hornbill, grey (<i>Lophoceros birostris</i>),
+<a href="#page78">78,</a>
+<a href="#page95">95,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Ibis,
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;black (<i>Inocotis papillosus</i>),
+<a href="#page135">135</a><br>
+<br>
+Iora (<i>Aegithina tiphia</i>),
+<a href="#page35">35,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page71">71,</a>
+<a href="#page72">72,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Jacana,
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;bronze-winged (<i>Metopus indicus</i>),
+<a href="#page134">134,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page144">144,</a>
+<a href="#page145">145,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;pheasant-tailed (<i>Hydrophasianus chirurgus</i>),
+<a href="#page114">114,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page144">144,</a>
+<a href="#page145">145,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Jackdaw,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+<br>
+Jungle-fowl (<i>Gallus ferrugineus</i>),
+<a href="#page108">108</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Kestrel,
+<a href="#page160">160,</a>
+<a href="#page161">161,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+King-crow. <i>See</i> <a href="#drongo">Drongo</a><br>
+<br>
+Kingfisher,
+<a href="#page184">184,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;pied (<i>Ceryle rudis</i>),
+<a href="#page27">27,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88</a><br>
+&mdash;white-breasted (<i>Halcyon smyrnensis</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page45">45,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+<br>
+Kite (<i>Milvus govinda</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page14">14,</a>
+<a href="#page26">26,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page119">119,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page160">160,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+&mdash;black-winged (<i>Elanus caeruleus</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+&mdash;brahminy (<i>Haliastur indicus</i>),
+<a href="#page56">56,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68</a><br>
+&mdash;large Indian (<i>Milvus melanotis</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+<br>
+Koel (<i>Eudynamis honorata</i>),
+<a href="#page8">8,</a>
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page84">84,</a>
+<a href="#page110">110,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page125">125,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page141">141,</a>
+<a href="#page155">155,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page163">163,</a>
+<a href="#page168">168</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="lapwing"></a>
+Lapwing,
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;red-wattled (<i>Sarcogrammus indicus</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page77">77,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page139">139</a><br>
+&mdash;yellow-wattled (<i>Sarciophorus malabaricus</i>),
+<a href="#page77">77,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="lark"></a>
+Lark, crested (<i>Galerita cristata</i>),
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page56">56,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108</a><br>
+&mdash;red-winged bush (<i>Mirafra erythroptera</i>),
+<a href="#page123">123</a><br>
+&mdash;sky (<i>Alauda gulgula</i>),
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Mallard. <i>See</i> <a href="#duck">Duck</a><br>
+<br>
+Martin, sand (<i>Cotyle sinensis</i>),
+<a href="#page14">14,</a>
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page167">167,</a>
+<a href="#page187">187,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+<br>
+Merlin, common (<i>Aesalon regulus</i>),
+<a href="#page160">160,</a>
+<a href="#page161">161</a><br>
+&mdash;red-headed (<i>Aesalon chicquera</i>),
+<a href="#page12">12,</a>
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+<br>
+Minivet,
+<a href="#page51">51,</a>
+<a href="#page158">158,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page181">181</a><br>
+&mdash;little (<i>Pericrocotus peregrinus</i>),
+<a href="#page52">52,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page125">125,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="munia"></a>
+Munia,
+<a href="#page21">21</a><br>
+&mdash;red or amadavat (<i>Estrelda amandava</i>),
+<a href="#page15">15,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page140">140,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page186">186</a><br>
+&mdash;white-throated (<i>Uroloncha malabarica</i>),
+<a href="#page16">16,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162,</a>
+<a href="#page186">186</a><br>
+<br>
+Myna,
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page175">175,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;bank (<i>Acridotheres ginginianus</i>),
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page94">94,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123</a><br>
+&mdash;brahminy (<i>Temenuchus pagodarum</i>),
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page94">94,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124</a><br>
+&mdash;common (<i>Acridotheres tristis</i>),
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page93">93,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;pied. <i>See</i> <a href="#starling">Pied Starling</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="nightjar"></a>
+Nightjar,
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page66">66,</a>
+<a href="#page87">87,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108</a><br>
+&mdash;Franklin's (<i>Caprimulgus monticolus</i>),
+<a href="#page37">37,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88</a><br>
+&mdash;Horsfield's (<i>Caprimulgus horsfieldi</i>),
+<a href="#page37">37,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106</a><br>
+&mdash;Indian (<i>Caprimulgus asiaticus</i>),
+<a href="#page37">37,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88</a><br>
+<br>
+Nuthatch (<i>Sitta castaneiventris</i>),
+<a href="#page7">7,</a>
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page23">23,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Openbill (<i>Anastomus oscitans</i>),
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+<br>
+Oriole,
+<a href="#page78">78,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+&mdash;black-headed (<i>Oriolus melanocephalus</i>),
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page42">42</a><br>
+&mdash;Indian (<i>Oriolus kundoo</i>),
+<a href="#page42">42,</a>
+<a href="#page90">90</a><br>
+<br>
+Osprey,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page160">160,</a>
+<a href="#page161">161,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+Ouzel, black-throated (<i>Merula atrigularis</i>),
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+&mdash;grey-winged (<i>Merula boulboul</i>),
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+<br>
+Owl,
+<a href="#page66">66,</a>
+<a href="#page159">159</a><br>
+&mdash;barn (<i>Strix flammea</i>),
+<a href="#page29">29,</a>
+<a href="#page49">49</a><br>
+&mdash;brown fish (<i>Ketupa ceylonensis</i>),
+<a href="#page14">14,</a>
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44</a>
+<a href="#page193">193,</a>
+<a href="#page194">194,</a>
+<a href="#page195">195</a><br>
+&mdash;collared scops (<i>Scops bakkamaena</i>),
+<a href="#page22">22,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page87">87</a><br>
+&mdash;dusky horned (<i>Bubo coromandus</i>),
+<a href="#page6">6,</a>
+<a href="#page14">14,</a>
+<a href="#page22">22,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193,</a>
+<a href="#page196">196</a><br>
+&mdash;mottled wood (<i>Syrnium ocellatum</i>),
+<a href="#page22">22,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44</a><br>
+&mdash;rock horned (<i>Bubo bengalensis</i>),
+<a href="#page14">14,</a>
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193,</a>
+<a href="#page195">195</a><br>
+<br>
+Owlet, jungle (<i>Glaucidium radiatum</i>),
+<a href="#page6">6,</a>
+<a href="#page86">86,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169</a><br>
+&mdash;spotted (<i>Athene brama</i>),
+<a href="#page6">6,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page86">86,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88,</a>
+<a href="#page98">98,</a>
+<a href="#page118">118,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Paddy-bird. <i>See</i> <a href="#heron">Pond-heron</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="paroquet"></a>
+Paroquet or green parrot,
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page30">30,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88,</a>
+<a href="#page97">97,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;alexandrine (<i>Palaeornis eupatrius</i>),
+<a href="#page31">31,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44</a><br>
+&mdash;rose-winged (<i>Palaeornis torquatus</i>),
+<a href="#page31">31,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53</a><br>
+<br>
+Parrot, green <i>See</i> <a href="#paroquet">Paroquet</a><br>
+<br>
+Partridge, black (<i>Francolinus vulgaris</i>),
+<a href="#page98">98,</a>
+<a href="#page107">107,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138</a><br>
+&mdash;grey (<i>Francolinus pondicerianus</i>),
+<a href="#page76">76,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page97">97,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162,</a>
+<a href="#page186">186</a><br>
+<br>
+Pea-fowl (<i>Pavo cristatus</i>),
+<a href="#page98">98,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page162">162</a><br>
+<br>
+Pelican,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+Pie, tree (<i>Dendrocitta rufa</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+<br>
+Pigeon, blue rock (<i>Columba intermedia</i>),
+<a href="#page17">17,</a>
+<a href="#page22">22,</a>
+<a href="#page69">69,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page197">197</a><br>
+&mdash;green (<i>Crocopus phoenicopterus</i>),
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123</a><br>
+<br>
+Pipit (<i>Anthus rufulus</i>),
+<a href="#page56">56,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108</a><br>
+<br>
+Plover,
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;little ringed (<i>Aegialitis dubia</i>),
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+&mdash;spur-winged (<i>Hoplopterus ventralis</i>),
+<a href="#page57">57,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+&mdash;swallow (<i>Glareola lactea</i>),
+<a href="#page57">57</a><br>
+<br>
+Pochard. <i>See</i> <a href="#duck">Duck</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Quail,
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;grey (<i>Coturnix communis</i>),
+<a href="#page159">159,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+&mdash;rain (<i>Coturnix coromandelica</i>),
+<a href="#page121">121</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Rail, water (<i>Rallus indicus</i>),
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+Raven,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page14">14,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page197">197</a><br>
+<br>
+Redstart, Indian (<i>Ruticilla frontalis</i>),
+<a href="#page158">158,</a>
+<a href="#page167">167,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page173">173,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+&mdash;white-capped (<i>Chimarrhornis leucocephalus</i>),
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="robin"></a>
+Robin, Indian (<i>Thamnobia cambayensis</i>),
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page35">35,</a>
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page76">76,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+&mdash;magpie (<i>Copsychus saularis</i>),
+<a href="#page8">8,</a>
+<a href="#page35">35,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page74">74,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page120">120,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page155">155,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="roller"></a>
+Roller or "blue jay" (<i>Coracias indica</i>),
+<a href="#page38">38,</a>
+<a href="#page39">39,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page67">67,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page83">83,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page139">139,</a>
+<a href="#page141">141,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+<br>
+Rook,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Sand-grouse,
+<a href="#page77">77,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+<br>
+Sandpiper,
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+<br>
+Seven Sisters. <i>See</i> <a href="#babbler">Babbler</a><br>
+<br>
+Shikra (<i>Astur badius</i>),
+<a href="#page69">69,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page160">160</a><br>
+<br>
+Shoveller. <i>See</i> <a href="#duck">Duck</a><br>
+<br>
+Shrike,
+<a href="#page38">38,</a>
+<a href="#page50">50,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+&mdash;bay-backed (<i>Lanius vittatus</i>),
+<a href="#page51">51</a><br>
+&mdash;large grey (<i>Lanius lahtora</i>),
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page32">32,</a>
+<a href="#page50">50</a><br>
+&mdash;rufous-backed (<i>Lanius erythronotus</i>),
+<a href="#page51">51</a><br>
+<br>
+Skimmer, Indian (<i>Rhynchops albicollis</i>),
+<a href="#page57">57</a><br>
+<br>
+Skylark. <i>See</i> <a href="#lark">Lark</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="snakebird"></a>
+Snake-bird (<i>Plotus melanogaster</i>),
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+<br>
+Snipe,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page139">139,</a>
+<a href="#page158">158,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184,</a>
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+&mdash;fantail or full (<i>Gallinago coelestis</i>),
+<a href="#page140">140</a><br>
+&mdash;jack (<i>Gallinago gallinula</i>),
+<a href="#page140">140</a><br>
+&mdash;pintail (<i>Gallinago stenura</i>),
+<a href="#page139">139</a><br>
+<br>
+Sparrow (<i>Passer domesticus</i>),
+<a href="#page54">54,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+&mdash;yellow-throated (<i>Gymnorhis flavicollis</i>),
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page73">73,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172</a><br>
+<br>
+Spoonbill,
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="starling"></a>
+Starling,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+&mdash;pied (<i>Sternopastor contra</i>),
+<a href="#page77">77,</a>
+<a href="#page94">94,</a>
+<a href="#page107">107,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page138">138,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page155">155,</a>
+<a href="#page168">168</a><br>
+&mdash;rosy (<i>Pastor roseus</i>),
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page40">40,</a>
+<a href="#page139">139</a><br>
+<br>
+Stork,
+<a href="#page171">171,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;black-necked (<i>Xenorhynchus asiaticus</i>),
+<a href="#page176">176,</a>
+<a href="#page186">186,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+&mdash;white-necked (<i>Dissura episcopus</i>),
+<a href="#page113">113,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="sunbird"></a>
+Sunbird, purple (<i>Arachnechthra asiatica</i>),
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page6">6,</a>
+<a href="#page8">8,</a>
+<a href="#page20">20,</a>
+<a href="#page24">24,</a>
+<a href="#page36">36,</a>
+<a href="#page43">43,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+<br>
+Swallow,
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;Indian cliff (<i>Hirundo fluvicola</i>),
+<a href="#page17">17,</a>
+<a href="#page22">22,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page140">140,</a>
+<a href="#page197">197</a><br>
+&mdash;wire-tailed (<i>Hirundo smithii</i>),
+<a href="#page54">54,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page125">125,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+<br>
+Swift (<i>Cypselus indicus</i>),
+<a href="#page54">54,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Tailor-bird (<i>Orthotomus sutorius</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page72">72,</a>
+<a href="#page82">82,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page169">169,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+<br>
+Teal,
+<a href="#page3">3,</a>
+<a href="#page64">64,</a>
+<a href="#page143">143,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;cotton (<i>Nettopus coromandelianus</i>),
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page135">135,</a>
+<a href="#page148">148</a><br>
+&mdash;garganey or blue-winged (<i>Querquedula circia</i>),
+<a href="#page139">139,</a>
+<a href="#page159">159,</a>
+<a href="#page171">171</a><br>
+&mdash;whistling (<i>Dendocygna javanica</i>),
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+<br>
+Tern,
+<a href="#page57">57,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;black-bellied (<i>Sterna melanogaster</i>),
+<a href="#page57">57</a><br>
+&mdash;river, (<i>Sterna seena</i>),
+<a href="#page57">57</a><br>
+<br>
+Thrush, blue rock (<i>Petrophila cyanus</i>),
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+&mdash;Himalayan whistling (<i>Myophoneus temmincki</i>),
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+&mdash;small-billed mountain (<i>Oreocincla dauma</i>),
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+<br>
+Tit, green-backed (<i>Parus monticola</i>),
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Vulture,
+<a href="#page21">21,</a>
+<a href="#page159">159,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183</a><br>
+&mdash;Pondicherry or black (<i>Otogyps calvus</i>),
+<a href="#page26">26,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page88">88</a><br>
+&mdash;scavenger (<i>Neophron ginginianus</i>),
+<a href="#page56">56,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+&mdash;white-backed (<i>Pseudogyps bengalensis</i>),
+<a href="#page9">9,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page186">186,</a>
+<a href="#page193">193</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Wagtail,
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page157">157,</a>
+<a href="#page167">167,</a>
+<a href="#page172">172,</a>
+<a href="#page173">173,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page183">183,</a>
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+&mdash;grey (<i>Motacilla melanope</i>),
+<a href="#page158">158</a><br>
+&mdash;masked (<i>Motacilla personata</i>),
+<a href="#page158">158</a><br>
+&mdash;pied (<i>Motacilla maderaspatensis</i>),
+<a href="#page59">59,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page74">74,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a><br>
+&mdash;white (<i>Motacilla alba</i>),
+<a href="#page158">158</a><br>
+&mdash;white-faced (<i>Motacilla leucopsis</i>),
+<a href="#page158">158</a><br>
+<br>
+Warbler,
+<a href="#page139">139,</a>
+<a href="#page156">156,</a>
+<a href="#page181">181,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185,</a>
+<a href="#page191">191</a><br>
+&mdash;ashy wren (<i>Prinia socialis</i>),
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page132">132,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+&mdash;flycatcher (<i>Cryptolopha xanthoschista</i>),
+<a href="#page192">192</a><br>
+&mdash;Indian wren (<i>Prinia inornata</i>),
+<a href="#page48">48,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page131">131,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142</a><br>
+&mdash;reed (<i>Acrocephalus stentoreus</i>),
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+Water-hen, white-breasted (<i>Gallinula phoenicura</i>),
+<a href="#page98">98,</a>
+<a href="#page124">124,</a>
+<a href="#page133">133,</a>
+<a href="#page146">146</a><br>
+<br>
+<a name="weaverbird"></a>
+Weaver-bird or baya (<i>Ploceus baya</i>),
+<a href="#page114">114,</a>
+<a href="#page127">127,</a>
+<a href="#page142">142,</a>
+<a href="#page163">163,</a>
+<a href="#page176">176</a><br>
+<br>
+Whimbrel,
+<a href="#page184">184</a><br>
+<br>
+White-eye (<i>Zosterops palpebrosa</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page71">71,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page123">123,</a>
+<a href="#page180">180,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+<br>
+Widgeon. <i>See</i> <a href="#duck">Duck</a><br>
+<br>
+Woodpecker, golden-backed (<i>Brachypternus aurantius</i>),
+<a href="#page5">5,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page106">106,</a>
+<a href="#page108">108,</a>
+<a href="#page121">121,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+&mdash;pied (<i>Liopicus mahrattensis</i>),
+<a href="#page28">28,</a>
+<a href="#page44">44,</a>
+<a href="#page53">53,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+<br>
+Wood-shrike (<i>Tephrodornis pondicerianus</i>),
+<a href="#page7">7,</a>
+<a href="#page32">32,</a>
+<a href="#page51">51,</a>
+<a href="#page65">65,</a>
+<a href="#page68">68,</a>
+<a href="#page89">89</a>
+<a href="#page170">170,</a>
+<a href="#page182">182,</a>
+<a href="#page185">185</a><br>
+<br>
+Wryneck,
+<a href="#page182">182</a><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>ANIMALS OF NO IMPORTANCE</h3>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Nature</i>.&mdash;"We may commend the book as an excellent example of
+'Nature teaching.'"</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Literary World</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar makes us laugh while he teaches
+us.... These twenty essays are in all ways delightful."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Saturday Review</i>.&mdash;"A number of excellent books on Natural
+History ... proceed from Anglo-Indian authors; and certainly
+this ... is worthy of its predecessors."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Academy</i>.&mdash;"A chatty anecdote book ... showing a sense of
+humour and kindly insight ... many amusing stories."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Indian Daily News</i>.&mdash;"Brightly and cleverly written ...
+pleasant and amusing reading."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Morning Post</i> (Delhi).&mdash;"A treasure-trove of literary art."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Madras Mail</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar ... displays quite remarkable
+knowledge and insight as well as a pretty wit.... Mr. Dewar's
+volume is calculated to give delight to all who are interested
+in the creatures of God's earth. Its humours will raise many a
+smile, while its keenness and accuracy of observation should
+induce many readers to study more closely the ... life ...
+around them."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Civil and Military Gazette</i>.&mdash;"Shows the faculty of observation
+as well as a pleasant style."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Englishman</i>.&mdash;"The reader will easily fall under the sway of
+the writer's charms.... Mr. Dewar's book is as interesting as it
+is entertaining."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>BOMBAY DUCKS</h3>
+<center>AN ACCOUNT OF SOME OF THE EVERYDAY BIRDS AND BEASTS FOUND IN A
+NATURALIST'S EL DORADO</center>
+<br>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<center>I<small>LLUSTRATED BY</small> M<small>AJOR</small> F. D. S. FAYRER</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Standard</i>.&mdash;"The book is entertaining, even to a reader who is
+not a naturalist first and a reader afterwards.... The
+illustrations cannot be too highly praised."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily News</i>.&mdash;"A charming introduction to a great many
+interesting birds."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Scotsman</i>.&mdash;"Like a good curry, it is richly and agreeably
+seasoned with a pungent humour."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Guardian</i>.&mdash;"A series of clever and accurate essays
+on Indian Natural History written by a man who really knows the
+birds and beasts."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Chronicle</i>.&mdash;"A series of informing and often diverting
+chapters."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Tribune</i>.&mdash;"Those who know India ... will find themselves
+smiling again and again at the vivid recollection called up by
+these descriptions."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Times</i>.&mdash;"A collection of bright popular papers by an observant
+naturalist."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>.&mdash;"Most entertaining dissertations on the
+tricks and manners of many birds and beasts in India."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Yorkshire Daily Observer</i>.&mdash;"This handsome and charming
+book ... the author has many interesting observations to record,
+and he does so in a very racy manner."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Spectator</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Douglas Dewar's book is excellent ... the
+photographs of birds by Captain Fayrer ... are most remarkable."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Graphic</i>.&mdash;"Light and easy, yet full of information."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>County Gentleman</i>.&mdash;"Thoroughly interesting."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Illustrated London News</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar ... has collected a
+series of essays on bird life which for sprightliness and charm
+are equal to anything written since that classic 'The Tribes on
+my Frontier' was published."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Shooting Times</i>.&mdash;"... a more delightful work ... has not
+passed through our hands for many a long day.... There is not a
+dull line in the book, which is beautifully illustrated."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Truth</i>.&mdash;"... a naturalist with a happy gift for writing in a
+bright and entertaining way, yet without any sacrifice of
+scientific accuracy."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Outlook</i>.&mdash;"... the essays make pleasant reading.... We doubt
+if anything better has been done in bird photography."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pioneer</i>.&mdash;"... not only is the book very fascinating to read,
+but most instructive."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Indian Daily News</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar's excellent book ...
+beautifully illustrated."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Indian Daily Telegraph</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar's book is of the kind of
+delightful volume which is always to be kept at hand and dipped
+into."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Madras Mail</i>.&mdash;"Phil Robinson delighted a generation that knew
+not 'Eha,' and now Mr. Dewar will complete a trio which, for
+some time to come at least, will stand for all that is best in
+that branch of literature which they have made their own."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Civil and Military Gazette</i>.&mdash;"A volume which is far the best
+of its kind since the immortal works of Phil Robinson and
+'Eha.'"</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>The Indian Field</i>.&mdash;"... these charming chapters.... There is
+not a dull paragraph in the whole book."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>BIRDS OF THE PLAINS</h3>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Chronicle</i>.&mdash;"Here is a work worthy of all commendation
+to those who love birds."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Graphic</i>.&mdash;"... a work which all bird lovers will
+welcome ... beautifully illustrated."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Express</i>.&mdash;"... light, sprightly and thoroughly
+entertaining."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Globe</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar ... is gifted with the descriptive art in a
+high degree, and his vivacious style communicates the characters
+and habits of the birds with unerring fidelity and infinite
+spirit."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Sportsman</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar has a delightfully simple and quaintly
+humorous way of expressing himself, and his clever word-pictures
+of bird-life make charming reading."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Guardian</i>.&mdash;"His breezy style is pleasant and easy
+reading. The photographs deserve the highest praise."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Courier</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar has produced a book that will
+delight not only ornithologists, but all who have the good
+fortune to light on this humorously instructive volume."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Western Morning News</i>.&mdash;"The book is enjoyable from the playful
+preface to the last chapter."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Spectator</i>.&mdash;"... the contents are excellent."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Field</i>.&mdash;"... it may well stand on the same bookshelf with the
+entertaining and instructive writings of 'Eha.'"</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Madame</i>.&mdash;"... accounts of many birds written in the author's
+inimitable style."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Outlook</i>.&mdash;"... as charming a volume&mdash;avowedly ornithological&mdash;
+as it has been our good fortune to encounter."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Sunday Times</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar, like Goldsmith, has a delightful
+style."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar's volume is one of the best
+recent examples of sound information conveyed in attractive
+literary form."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Literary World</i>.&mdash;"Upon every page ... there is a merit to
+justify the existence of the page."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Dundee Advertiser</i>.&mdash;"... just as good reading as ... 'Bombay
+Ducks,' and to say so much is to bestow high praise."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Birmingham Post</i>.&mdash;"There is a gladness in his aspect, a
+pleasing inquisitiveness concerning bird mystery, and a simple,
+candid style of self-revelation in his essays full of
+fascination, with touches now and again that remind one of the
+descriptive qualities of Francis A. Knight. The wood-joy that
+inspired the felicitous phrases and delightful reflections of
+John Burroughs in the Western Hemisphere finds its counterpart
+in these Indian bird-pictures."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Indian Field</i>.&mdash;"... not a volume that will grow dusty and
+uncared for on a neglected shelf."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Times of India</i>.&mdash;"The book has a charm all its own, and is
+written with rare humour, a humour that in no way detracts from
+its scientific utility."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Englishman</i>.&mdash;"One of the most interesting books on bird-life
+we have seen."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>INDIAN BIRDS</h3>
+<center>A KEY TO THE COMMON BIRDS OF THE PLAINS OF INDIA</center>
+<br>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>.&mdash;"This practical and useful work ... is a
+key to the everyday birds of the Indian plains, in which birds
+are classified according to their habits and outward
+differences ... and familiarity with these pages would enable
+the average man in a few weeks to know all the birds he meets in
+an Indian station."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Mail</i>.&mdash;"The plan of this clever little volume ... is as
+simple as it is ingenious.... It is a safe and thorough guide."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Athen&aelig;um</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar is a capable guide."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Guardian</i>.&mdash;"... new, original and invaluable to the
+beginner ... it is a small book, but it represents a wonderful
+amount of thoughtful ingenuity and patient work."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily News</i>.&mdash;"We feel inclined to defy any Indian bird to hide
+its identity from an enquirer armed with this volume."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Truth</i>.&mdash;"An admirable practical handbook of Indian
+ornithology."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Scotsman</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar's compact, clearly classified, concise
+and comprehensive manual ... cannot but prove eminently
+serviceable."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Spectator</i>.&mdash;"The book is most carefully compiled and much
+ingenuity is displayed in framing this artificial analysis."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Western Daily Mercury</i>.&mdash;"A very interesting volume."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Courier</i>.&mdash;"All ornithologists in India ... will
+appreciate and value 'Indian Birds.'"</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Literary Post</i>.&mdash;"... a model of all that such a book should
+be."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pioneer</i>.&mdash;"The plan of the book is unique.... It can be
+heartily recommended."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Indian Field</i>.&mdash;"We can thoroughly recommend this book to all
+not versed in ornithology and who wish to know our birds without
+having to kill them."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>JUNGLE FOLK</h3>
+<center>ACCOUNTS OF SOME OF THE SMALLER FRY OF THE INDIAN JUNGLE</center>
+<br>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Westminster Gazette</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar writes brightly and cleverly
+about these lesser jungle folk."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Scotsman</i>.&mdash;"... interesting and delightful."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Evening Standard</i>.&mdash;"The author ... writes not only out of the
+fulness of his knowledge, but in a pleasant unpedantic style."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Liverpool Daily Post</i>.&mdash;"... most readable and enjoyable."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Sunday Times</i>.&mdash;"We give his book the highest praise possible
+when we say that it will serve as a matter-of-fact commentary to
+Mr. Kipling's 'Jungle Books.'"</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Irish Independent</i>.&mdash;"... a work of the most captivating
+charm."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Outlook</i>.&mdash;"... pleasant little essays."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Literary World</i>.&mdash;"This lively book ... abounds in
+word-pictures and happy humour."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Glasgow Evening News</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Douglas Dewar writes with
+accustomed grace and sympathetic knowledge."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Academy</i>.&mdash;"... with Mr. Dewar there is a smile on every page,
+and his touch is so light that one only realises, when the
+process is at an end, that a large amount of information has
+been imparted in an amusing form."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Western Morning News</i>.&mdash;"Every page makes for easy reading and
+ready attention."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Shooting Times</i>.&mdash;"... delightful reading."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Catholic Herald</i>.&mdash;"Quite the most interesting natural history
+work we have seen for a long time."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Courier</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar's ... shrewd observation, his
+quaint humour and his wide knowledge of Indian bird-life make
+his every page interesting."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>The World</i>.&mdash;"We have read and enjoyed much of his work before,
+but we think that 'Jungle Folk' makes even more delightful
+reading than anything that has come from its author's pen."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Birmingham Daily Post</i>.&mdash;"... entertaining sketches ... and
+light dissertations."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Times of India</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar's bright and pleasant pages."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Madras Mail</i>.&mdash;"The reader who has perused Mr. Dewar's books
+merely for amusement will find that he has incidentally added a
+good deal to his knowledge of Indian natural history."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>GLIMPSES OF INDIAN BIRDS</h3>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Globe</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar gives us something more than 'glimpses' of
+Indian bird-life in his very interesting volume."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Standard</i>.&mdash;"Not the least merit of the book is the author's
+unwillingness to take anything for granted."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Spectator</i>.&mdash;"We know nothing better to recommend to an amateur
+ornithologist who finds himself in India for the first time."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Guardian</i>.&mdash;"... vivid and delightful."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Observer</i>.&mdash;"... full of special knowledge."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Scotsman</i>.&mdash;"... a lively and interesting series of short
+studies."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Graphic</i>.&mdash;"The book is full of the right sort of
+information about birds."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Field</i>.&mdash;"... chatty and graphically written."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Citizen</i>.&mdash;"... very pleasant and very instructive
+reading."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>The World</i>.&mdash;"We have read and enjoyed his earlier efforts, but
+we think that his latest will be found the most valuable and
+enduring of all his work."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>.&mdash;"... much first-hand observation and
+experience."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Birmingham Daily Post</i>.&mdash;"These ... 'glimpses' ... so full of
+alert observation and racy description, are delightful and
+informing reading."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Newcastle Daily Chronicle</i>.&mdash;"... his accounts ... make us feel
+that we have been with him in something more than the spirit."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pioneer</i>.&mdash;"The charm of the volume ... lies in the evidence of
+the immense amount of observation carried out by the writer."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>BIRDS OF INDIAN HILLS</h3>
+<center>A GUIDE TO THE COMMON BIRDS OF THE INDIAN HILL STATIONS</center>
+<br>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<center>PRESS OPINIONS</center>
+
+<p><small><i>Sunday Times</i>.&mdash;"Excellent is hardly good enough a term for
+this volume."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Times</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar writes accurately and vividly of his
+selected group of birds in the Himalayas and Nilgiris, and adds
+a list of those to be found in the Palni Hills."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Field</i>.&mdash;"Mr. Dewar gives short descriptions of the most
+notable species, not in wearisome detail as affected by some
+writers, but in a few sentences which carry enough to enable the
+reader to recognise a bird when he sees it."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Aviatic Review</i>.&mdash;"... a very useful, compact little volume."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>.&mdash;"The book will appeal most of all to those
+who have occasion to visit Indian hill stations."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Morning Post</i>.&mdash;"Now and again he gives us little pictures of
+bird-life, which are pleasant proofs that he is, like M. Fabre,
+a master of the new science that will not select the facts or
+distort them to suit some splendid generalisation."</small></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>THE MAKING OF SPECIES</h3>
+<center>B<small>Y</small> DOUGLAS DEWAR <small>AND</small> FRANK FINN</center>
+<br>
+<center><i>WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS</i></center>
+<br>
+<center>A BOOK THAT BRINGS DARWINISM UP TO DATE</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+PRESS OPINIONS
+
+<p><small><i>Truth</i>.&mdash;"'The Making of Species' will do much to arrest the
+fossilisation of biological science in England."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Outlook</i>.&mdash;"... a book of knowledge and originality. Messrs.
+Dewar and Finn are capable investigators. This work is
+thoroughly characteristic of our day. A long volume full of
+interest and very clearly written."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Literary World</i>.&mdash;"The book is certainly to be welcomed for the
+concise way in which it deals with the greatest problem of
+zoology."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Aberdeen Free Press</i>.&mdash;"The book is well written. We do not
+doubt that the work will produce good fruit and attract
+considerable attention."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Telegraph</i>.&mdash;"Interesting and suggestive. It should
+receive wide attention."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Dublin Daily Express</i>.&mdash;"The merits of the book are undoubtedly
+great. We recommend it to the attentive study of all who are
+interested in the subject of evolution."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Manchester Courier</i>.&mdash;"The amateur entering this perplexing
+field could hardly have a better guide."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Nation</i>.&mdash;"An exceptionally interesting book."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Scotsman</i>.&mdash;"Impartial and awakening."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Bristol Mercury</i>.&mdash;"The authors ... handle a subject which has
+an obvious controversial side with strength, and there are
+convincing qualities as well as lucidity in the views so
+admirably set forth."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Times</i>.&mdash;"The two authors ... deal suggestively with the
+difficulties of natural selection ... and their arguments are
+supported by a goodly array of facts."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Liverpool Courier</i>.&mdash;"Contains a great deal of well-marshalled
+observation."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Lancet</i>.&mdash;"A very interesting book ... simply and clearly
+written."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Dundee Advertiser</i>.&mdash;"... a book which is at the same time one
+of the most interesting and readable on the controversial
+aspects of natural history published in recent years."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>The Christian World</i>.&mdash;"This very interesting work."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Bristol Times</i>.&mdash;"A work of value, which will give occasion to
+many to think, and an admirable presentation of facts."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Westminster Review</i>.&mdash;"... written in popular language and
+contains many original observations."</small></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Daily Chronicle</i>.&mdash;"An interesting and suggestive book."</small></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Bird Calendar for Northern India, by
+Douglas Dewar
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BIRD CALENDAR FOR NORTHERN INDIA ***
+
+***** This file should be named 18237-h.htm or 18237-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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+
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+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
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+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
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