I02 



MEADOWLARK, 



-^ 



MEADOWLARK. 



Meadowlark: Stiirnella magna. 



Length about ii inches. 



Upper parts mixed, brown, black and buffy; outer tail- 

 feathers white. 



Breast bright yellow, with a large black crescent. 

 Resident (common) all the year. 



The Meadowlark is seen flying over meadows, or 

 singing from a fence rail or a dead branch. He wall 

 be know^n in flight by his white tail-feathers, and, when 

 perching, if he faces you, by the black crescent on his 

 yellow breast. 



The Lark has a heavenly voice, and we are grateful 

 to him for being so generous with it; all day long it 

 rises from the meadows, and he sings much earlier 

 and later in the year than most birds. In bird or- 

 chestra his voice is the flute, carrvino- a clear, sustained 



