Index 
Jackdaw, 78, 
Jay, 80. 
Keats’ “Ode to the Night- 
ingale,” 113. 
Kestrel, 40. 
Kite, 42. 
Lapwing, 67. 
Lark, 93, 94, 113. 
Loon or Lown, 52. 
Mallard, 68. 
Magpie, 79. 
Martlet, 104. 
Mews, origin of, 41, note. 
Nature, contrasts in, 26. 
Newton, Prof., cited, 42. 
Night and its birds, 56, 95. 
Nightingale, 95, 106, 113. 
Osprey, 46. 
Ostrich, 50. 
Ousel, 93, 96. 
- Owl, 54. 
Papingo, in Archery, 50. 
Parrot, 48. 
Partridge, 65. 
Peacock, 89. 
Pelican, 51. 
Peregrine Falcon, 40. 
Pheasant, 64. 
Philomela or Nightingale, 
106. 
Pigeon, 90, 92. 
Popinjay, 49. 
Quail, 66. 
Raven, 69. 
Redbreast, 100. 
Rook, 72. 
Ruddock, 100. 
Shakespeare’s youthful sur- 
roundings, 6; his sports, 
7, 8,93 his sympathy with 
living creatures, 7. 
Shelley’s “Ode to the Sky- 
hark 77 E13: 
Snipe, 66. 
Sparrow-hawk, 41. 
Spring and birds, 24. 
Starling, 78. 
Summer, birds in, 23. 
Swallow, 103. 
Swan, 85. 
Thrush or Throstle, 93, 97. 
Turkey-cock, 88. 
Turtle-dove, 91. 
Vulture, 46. 
Wagtail, gg. 
Wild-duck, 68. 
Wild-goose, 83. 
Winter, birds in, 25. 
Woodcock, 63. 
Wordsworth’s “ Ode to the 
Cuckoo,” 113. 
Wren, 93, 98. 
Glasgow: Printed at the University Press by Robert MacLehose and Co. Ltd. 
