han 
986 ORNITHOLOGY AND OOLOGY. 
ously to the lower part of the breast, and in spots to the tibiz; the belly and under tail 
coverts white, streaked faintly with brown, except in the very middle; edges of wings 
and tail feathers brownish-red; lesser coverts like the back; two reddish bands across 
the wings (over the ends of the middle and greater coverts); lores dull-grayish. 
Female olivaceous-brown, brighter on the rump; beneath white; all the feathers 
everywhere streaked with brown, except, on the middle of the belly and under coverts, 
a superciliary light stripe. 
Length, six and twenty-five one-hundredths inches; wing, three and thirty-four 
one-hundredths; tail, two and fifty one-hundredths; bill, above, forty-six one-hun- 
dredths of an inch. 
This species, although quite common in many localities 
of New England, is very irregularly distributed. For in- 
stance, it breeds abundantly in and near Cambridge, Mass., 
but is not found in any other part of the State in any thing 
like the abundance that it is there. In that locality, it is 
one of the most common birds breeding ; in other localities, it 
is occasionally found in only detached pairs. So, in Maine, 
it is common in the neighborhood of the Umbagog lakes; but 
elsewhere it is not often seen. There seems to be, as Mr. 
Allen justly remarks, a great increase of this species within 
the last few years; and it is beginning to be one of our most 
common species. The birds separate into pairs soon after 
their arrival, about the middle of April, but do not com- 
mence building before the middle of May. They are occa- 
sionally resident here through the mild winter; but, as a 
general thing, they arrive in New England in flocks of ten 
or a dozen about the last of March. The nest is usually 
built in a pine or cedar tree, and is sometimes thirty or even 
forty feet from the ground,—oftener about fifteen or twenty. 
It is constructed of fine roots and grasses, and is lined with 
horsehair and hogs’ bristles. One specimen in my collection 
has the cast-off skin of a snake woven in the rest of the 
fabric ; and I have seen nests lined with mosses. Generally, 
hairs of different animals form the lining, and roots and 
grass the main structure. 
The eggs are of a beautiful bluish-green color, and marked 
with spots and streaks of black: their form is a sharply 
pointed oval, and their dimensions vary from .94 by .64 inch 
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