162 MUTt BWAS. 



to live fifty years. The male bird swims higher out of the 

 water than the female. 



The noise made by the sounding pinions of these great birds, 

 may be heard at a Ions; distance. They fly in a straight line, 

 and at the height of three or four hundred feet, that is the 

 wild birds; the tame ones only attain to a much lower elevation. 

 They walk in an ungainly manner, and evidently are not at 

 home on the dry land. Every one must have observed the 

 elegant manner in which the Common Swan arches up its wings 

 when sailing about on the water; and it seems, so I am told, 

 that the attitude is peculiar to it, and is not exhibited by the 

 wild species. 



They feed on water-plants, their roots and leaves, insects 

 and their larvae, and occasionally swallow fish. They take some 

 water each time that they browse. 



The Swan has obtained the character, contradicted by its 

 name, as well as, except in some very small degree, by fact, 

 of being a bird of song. It has especially had assigned to it 

 the office of singing before it dies, a dirge at its own departure, 

 the echoes of which die away over the form that has then 

 ceased to utter it. Some saturnine epigrammatist thus turned 

 the idea into a medium of satire — 



'Swans sing before they die — 



Methinks, 'twere no bad thing, 



"Would certain persons die before they sing.' 



The usual note is rendered, by Meyer, by the words 'maul, 

 maul.' The Swan has, however, a low, soft, and not unmusical 

 voice, formed of two notes, uttered in the spring and summer, 

 when engaged with its young. Colonel Hawker has printed 

 a few bars of it in stave: the bird kept nodding with its 

 head, as if pleased with its own music, or beating time to it. 



The Swan disposes its nest on the ground near the water 

 side, or on some mound on an island in the river or lake. It 

 is made of rushes and flags, and if the water threatens to rise, 

 more materials, which the male bird brings and the female 

 works in, are added to the deposit under the eggs, which are 

 thus gradually raised further out of danger. 



The following appeared in the 'Nottingham Journal,' in 

 1844: — 'We are informed, upon undoubted authority, that the 

 Swans (which usually build upon the ground,) have this year 

 invariably raised their nests to the height of two yards and 

 upwards; a similar fact is observable with respect to Water 



