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CHARACTER OF THE REDBREAST. 



covered, to save it from destruction ; if unprotected, it was certain to be eaten. I have known 

 them to visit laborers at breakfast-time to eat butter from their hands, and enter a lantern to 

 feast on the candle. One, as I have been assured, is in the constant habit of entering a house 

 in a tan-yard, by the window, that it might feed upon tallow, when the men were using this 

 substance in the preparation of hides. But even further than this, I have seen the Redbreast 

 exhibit its partiality for scraps of fat, etc. Being present one day in December, 1837, when a 

 golden eagle was fed, a Robin, to my surprise, took the eagle's place on the perch the moment 

 that he descended to the ground to eat some food given him, and when there, picked off some 

 little fragments of fat or scraps of flesh ; this done, it quite unconcernedly alighted on the 

 chain on which the ' rapacious ' bird was fastened. 



" I at the same time learned that this Robin regularly visited the eagle's abode at feeding- 

 time, though as yet there was no severity of weather. Although the Robin escaped the golden 

 eagle unscathed, as much cannot be said for one which occasionally entered the kitchen at the 



REDBREAST AND REDSTART. EryUiacut rubtcula and ButiciUa phasnicurus. 



Falls, and sang there ; having one day alighted on a cage in which a toucan was kept, this 

 bird with its huge bill seized and devoured it." Another Robin, mentioned by the same 

 author, was in the habit of attending on a carpenter, stealing the shavings as materials for his 

 nest, and making very free with Ms grease-pot, pecking from it while in his hand. 



The Robin is also remarkably fond of bread and butter on which honey or sugar has been 

 spread, and will eat of this dainty until it is hardly able to fly. One of these birds who had 

 been treated to such a repast, was so pleased with it that he returned, bringing with him three 

 companions, who gorged themselves to such a degree, that they were taken up by hand, and 

 put away for the night into a comfortable recess. After a while, between twenty and thirty 

 Robins came to the house in hopes of obtaining the sweet food. Perhaps they may be instinct- 

 ively led to sugar and fatty substances, as a means of preserving themselves against the effects 

 of cold. Cream is in great favor with the birds during the winter months, and they have been 

 seen to enter an outhouse which was employed for washing purposes, and to eat the soap. 



The Redbreast is a most combative bird, fighting its own species with singular energy, 

 and often killing its opponent. One of these 'nrds killed upwards of twenty of its own kind, 



