THE SONG THRUSH. 59 



bread, meat, and many other things which come to table, for 

 they are not dainty. They are fond of bathing. 



In confinement, this bird is usually placed within a trellis, 

 or it is put into a large cage of any shape, but at least three 

 feet and a half long, and nearly as high; for, being a large and 

 wild bird, and in constant motion, it easily injures its plumage. 

 It is best that such large birds should have a sepai'ate room 

 appropriated to them, as their copious e.xcrements smell 

 offensively. 



The most usual maladies to which this bird is subject are a 

 stoppage of the feather glands, constipation, and atrophy. 



M 



