FINCHES, SPARROWS, ETC. 313 



pathize, pitying the man whose heart does not leap with enthusiasm 

 at the sight of rival males dashing through the woods like winged 

 meteors, leaving in tlieir wake a train of sparkling notes. 



The Black-headed Grosbeak (596. Habia melanocephala)., a western 

 species,- has beeu recorded from Michigan. 



/ 597. Guiraca caerulea {Linn.). Blue Grosbeak. Ad. i . — Deep 

 blue; lores and chin black; back blackish; wings and tail black, slightly 

 edged with blue ; middle wing-coverts widely, and greater coverts narrowly 

 tipped with chestnut-rufous. Ad. 9 . — Upper parts grayish brown ; in some 

 specimens more or less blue about the head and rump and lesser wing-cov- 

 erts ; rump inclined to ashy; wings fuscous, the greater and middle coverts 

 tipped with ochraceous-buff ; tail fuscous, slightly margined with bluish gray ; 

 under parts brownish cream-buff, the feathers of the breast sometimes blue at 

 the base. Im. 6 .—Resembles the ? . L., 7-00 ; W., 3-50 ; T., 2-75 ; B., -65. 



Range. — United States ; breeds from about latitude 38° southward into 

 Mexico ; winters south of our limits. 



Washington, very uncommon S. K., May 1 to Sept. 30. Cambridge, A. V., 

 one instance. May. 



Nest., of grasses, in bushes or high weedy growths. Eggs.^ three to four, 

 pale bluish white, -S-i x -65. 



" Unless seen under the most favorable circumstances the adult 

 male does not appear to be blue, but of an ill-defined, dusky color, and 

 may easily be mistaken for a Cow Blackbird {Molothrus ater), unless 

 most carefully watched ; besides, they usually sit motionless, in a 

 watchful attitude, for a considerable length of time, and thus easily 

 escape observation. 



" The Blue Grosbeak frequents much the same localities as those 

 selected by the Indigo Bird and Field Sparrow — viz., the thickets of 

 shrubs, briers, and tall weeds lining a stream flowing across a meadow 

 or bordering a field, or the similar growth which has sprung up in an 

 old clearing. The usual note is a strong, harsh pfchick, and the song 

 of the male is a very beautiful though rather feeble warble, somewhat 

 like that of the Purple Finch, but bearing a slight resemblance also to 

 that of the Rose-breasted Grosbeak" (Ridgway). 



( 598. Passerina cyanea (Li/m.). Indigo Bunting; Indigo-bird. 

 Ad. s . — Rich blue, deeper on the head, brighter on the back ; lores blackisli ; 

 wings and tail black, margined with blue. Ad. 9 . — Upper parts uniform 

 grayish brown without streaks ; wings and tail fuscous, sometimes lightly 

 margined with bluish ; wing-coverts margined with grayish brown ; under 

 parts whitish, washed with grayish brown and indistinctly streaked with 

 darker; belly whiter, /m.— Resembles the 9, but is darker. Ad. $ in win- 

 ter. — Resembles the 9 , but has more or less blue in the plumage. L., 5-59; 

 W., 2-58; T., 2-11; B., -41. 



