22 Mr. J. BlackwalFs Ornithological Notes. 



an instinctive impulse, liable to be brought into operation by the 

 agency of various stimuli, combined with a suitable state of the 

 vocal organs*; and this latter condition deserves especial atten- 

 tion, for most of our songsters manifestly become mute in autumn 

 from inability to continue their melodious strains ; their perse- 

 vering but ineffectual efforts to prolong them, and the difficulty 

 they experience in recommencing them in spring, proving to 

 demonstration that their pleasing lays depend upon the energy 

 of those muscles which contribute to form the voice ; an energy 

 which is influenced chiefly by food, temperature, health, and the 

 exercise of the reproductive function. 



The moulting of birds speedily follows the exhaustion conse- 

 quent on the propagation of their species, and an attendant re- 

 laxation of the vocal organs, which renders them incapable of 

 obeying the dictates of the will, is, I conceive, the true cause of 

 the periodical silence of singing birds. To this state of things 

 succeeds a gradual reduction in the temperature of the atmo- 

 sphere and in the supply of animal food, so that, with a few ex- 

 ceptions already noticed, and those dependent in all probability 

 upon some constitutional peculiarity, the enfeebled organs of 

 voice do not recover their tone till the ensuing spring, when in- 

 numerable animated beings, excited to activity by the genial 

 warmth of the season, afford abundance of stimulating nutriment 

 to the feathered songsters, which, with the concurrent restora- 

 tion of their physical energies, enliven every copse with their 

 sweet and unsophisticated music. Such I apprehend is the real 

 nature of the connexion which subsists between atmospheric tem- 

 perature and the singing of birds. 



Many birds arc endowed with an extraordinary capacity for 

 imitating sounds, and under the careful tuition of skilful instruct- 

 ors readily learn to pipe long and difficult tunes, to articulate 

 words, and even to repeat short sentences with surprising pre- 

 cision. Among our native species, the jay, magpie, starling and 

 bullfinch afford familiar instances of the truth of this assertion ; 

 but I am impressed with the belief that the spontaneous employ- 

 ment of this faculty by individuals which have never been re- 

 moved from their natural haunts is much more limited than is 

 commonly supposed. If the term " mimic " be strictly applicable 

 to any British bird in the wild state, the sedge warbler may be 

 thought pre-eminently to merit that appellation, and, indeed, its 

 song is usually described in ornithological works as being com- 

 posed, in a great measure, of passages borrowed from the lays of 

 other songsters ; yet I feel thoroughly satisfied that this reiterated 



* For particulars consult an essay on the notes of birds published in the 

 Memoirs of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Manchester, second 

 series, vol. iv. p. 289. 



