INTRODUCTION. xiii 



interruption of respiration, which w(5uld otherwise follow the 

 rapidity of their motion through the resisting atmosphere ; and 

 thus the Ostrich, though deprived of the power of flight, runs 

 almost with the swiftness of the wind, and requires, as he 

 possesses, the usual resources of air conferred on other birds. 

 Were it possible for man to move with the rapidity of a Swal- 

 low, the resistance of the air, without some such peculiar pro- 

 vision as in birds, would quickly bring on suffocation. The 

 superior vital heat of this class of beings is likewise probably 

 due to this greater aeration of the vital fluid. 



Birds, as well as quadrupeds, may be generally distinguished 

 into two great classes from the food on which they are destined 

 to subsist ; and may, consequently, be termed carnivorous and 

 granivorous. Some also hold a middle nature, or partake of 

 both. The granivorous and herbivorous birds are provided 

 with larger and longer intestines than those of the carnivorous 

 kinds. Their food, consisting chiefly of grain of various sorts, 

 is conveyed whole into the craw or first stomach, where it is 

 softened and acted upon by a peculiar glandular secretion 

 thrown out upon its surface ; it is then again conveyed into a 

 second preparatory digestive organ ; and finally transmitted 

 into the true stomach, or gizzard, formed of two strong muscles 

 connected externally with a tendinous substance, and lined in- 

 ternally with a thick membrane of great power and strength ; 

 and in this place the unmasticated food is at length completely 

 triturated, and prepared for the operation of the gastric juice. 

 The extraordinary powers of the gizzard in comminuting food, 

 to prepare it for digestion, almost exceeds the bounds of cred- 

 ibility. Turkeys and common fowls have been made to swal- 

 low sharp angular fragments of glass, metallic tubes, and balls 

 armed with needles, and even lancets, which were found 

 broken and compressed, without producing any apparent pain 

 or wounds in the stomach. The gravel pebbles swallowed by 

 this class of birds with so much avidity, thus appear useful in 

 bruising and comminuting the grain they feed on, and prepar- 

 ing it for the solvent action of the digestive organs. 



Those birds which live chiefly on grain and vegetable sub- 



