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1. Tu whit! tu whoo!-in my ancient hall, In my old gray turret' high,

Where the moss is thick on the crumbling wall, A king-a king reign I!

Tu whoo!

I wake the wood with my startling call
To the frighted passers-by.

2. The ivy-vines in the chink that grow, Come clambering up to me;

2

And the newt, the bat, and the toad, I trow,3 A right merry band are we.

Tu whoo!

Oh, the coffined monks4 in their cells below

Have no goodlier company.

3. Let them joy in their brilliant sunlit skies,
And their sunset hues, who may;

But softer by far than the tints they prize,
Is the dim of the twilight gray!

Tu whoo!

Oh, a weary thing to an owlet's eyes,

Is the garish blaze of day.

4. When the sweet dew sleeps in the midnight cool,
Some tall tree top I win;

And the toad leaps up on her throne-shaped stool,
And our revels loud begin-

Tu whoo!

While the bullfrog croaks o'er his stagnant pool,
Or plunges sportive in.

5. As the last lone ray from the hamlet fades
In the dark and still profound,

The night-bird sings in the cloister shades,
And the glow-worm lights the ground-
Tu whoo!

And fairies trip o'er the broad green glades,
To the firefly circling round.

6. Tu whit! tu whoo! All the livelong night
A right gladsome life lead we;

While the starry ones from their azure height
Look down approvingly.

Tu whoo!

They may bask9 who will in the noonday light,
But the midnight dark for me.

MRS. HEWITT.

1 TUR'-RET, a little tower; a spire rising 5 GAR'-ISH (or gair'-ish), dazzling; gaudy. from a building.

2 NEWT, a small lizard.

3 TROW, think; believe.

6 HAM'-LET, small village.

7 ELOIS'-TER, a house inhabited by monks or

4 MONK, one who retires from the world, GLADES, open places in forests.

and devotes himself to religion.

nuns.

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9 BASK, to lie in warmth; be at ease,

II. PERCHING OR SINGING BIRDS.

"If thou art pained with the world's noisy stir,

Or crazed with its mad tumults, and weighed down
With any of the ills of human life';

If thou art sick and weak, or mourn'st the loss

Of brethren gone to that far distant land

To which we all do pass, gentle and poor,

The gayest and the gravest, all alike';

Then turn into the peaceful woods and hear
The thrilling music of the forest birds."-M'LELLAN.

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1. African Fly-catcher, Muscicapa rufiventer. 2. Mocking-bird, Turdus polyglottus. 3. Kingbird, or Tyrant Fly-catcher, Muscicapa tyrannus. 4. White Plumed African Shrike, Lanius plumatus. 5. American Shrike, Lanius borealis. 6. Cedar-bird, Ampelis Americana. 7. Greenlet, or Green Wren, Muscicapa cantatrix. 8. Robin, Turdus migratorius. 9. Wood-thrush, Turdus melodus.

1. THE second order of birds consists of the PERCHERS, or sparrow-like birds, sometimes also called Singing Birds, because it embraces nearly all those which have musical notes.

These birds are of smaller size than those of the other orders, and they nearly equal the numbers of all the others.

2. As the name PERCHERS indicates, the power of grasping the twigs of trees and of perching1 upon them is a prominent feature in the birds of this order. The habitual residence of most of them is in the woods or thickets; all have the powers of flight in full perfection; and the larger part feed upon insects, or the seeds of vegetables, which they procure by the beak alone.

3. The perching birds may be divided into the following four tribes or subdivisions, founded on the varying form of the beak: the toothed-bills, the cleft-bills, the cone-shapedbills, and the slender or thin-bills. As some of the toothedbills seize and feed upon small living animals, they properly come next in order to the birds of prey.

4. The toothed-bills are so named because they have the upper mandible2 notched on each side near the tip, like the bills of the falcons. The principal birds included in this division are the shrikes, or butcher-birds; the thrushes; the large family of the warblers, or singing forest birds; the chatterers; and the fly-catchers. About fifty species of the warblers alone, among which are included the bluebird, yellowbird, tailor-bird, the wagtails, and a host of other summer birds, are found on the American continent.

5. Among the butcher-birds, the great American shrike, which is about ten inches in length, is entitled to no common degree of respect, as his courage and intrepidity are beyond every other bird of his size, the kingbird alone excepted. In defense of his young he attacks the largest hawks or eagles with a resolution truly astonishing, so that all of them respect him, and on all occasions decline the contest. The shrike has a curious habit of catching grasshoppers and small birds, and sticking them on a thorn or sharp stick before eating them.

6. The thrushes, which are of a great variety of colors, are common in all parts of the world, and many of them are eminently birds of song. The wood-thrush of America, which is a sweet but solitary songster; the mavis, or song-thrush of Europe; the English blackbird, the American robin, the Amer

ican mocking-bird, and the English nightingale, all belong to this family.

7.

"With the sweet airs of spring the robin comes;

And in her simple song there seems to gush

A strain of sorrow when she visiteth

But when the gloom

Her last year's withered nest.
Of the deep twilight falls, she takes her perch3
Upon the red-stemmed hazel's slender twig,
That overhangs the brook, and suits her song

To the slow rivulet's inconstant chime."4-M 'LELLAN.

8. The American mocking-bird, which is nine and a half inches in length, having the upper parts of the head and body of a dark gray, tinged with brown, and the lower parts brownish-white, is unrivaled for his great variety of song; and by his great powers of imitation he is superior to any bird that possesses its native notes alone.

9. "He often deceives the sportsman, and sends him in search of birds that perhaps are not within miles of him, but whose notes he exactly imitates; even birds are frequently imposed upon by this admirable mimic, and are decoyed by the fancied calls of their mates, or they dive with precipitation into the depths of thickets at the scream of what they suppose to be the sparrow-hawk.

and ener

10. "In confinement he loses little of the power gy of his song. He whistles for the dog; Cæsar starts up, wags his tail, and runs to meet his master. He squeaks out like a hurt chicken, and the hen hurries about with hanging wings and bristled feathers, clucking to protect her injured brood. He repeats the tune taught him by his master, though of considerable length, fully and faithfully. He runs over the quiverings of the canary, and the clear whistlings of the Virginia nightingale, or redbird, with such superior execution and effect that the mortified birds feel their own inferiority, and become altogether silent; while he seems to triumph in their defeat by redoubling his exertions."

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11. Among the chatterers, or wax-wings, the cedar waxwing, or cedar-bird, is the principal one known to us. Of the more numerous family of the fly-catchers, the kingbird, the phebe-bird, the redstart, and the greenlets, which are gener

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