120 THE NATURALIST'S GUIDE. 



heard it sing with a low warbling note which was very 

 pleasant. 



90. Melospiza Lincolnii, BAIRD. Lincoln's Sparrow. 

 Very rare. Mr. S. Jillson has taken it at Hudson on one 

 or two occasions in spring. 



9 1 . Fasserella iliaca, SWAIN. Fox-colored Sparrow. 

 Common during the migrations. Have taken it in spring 

 from March 14th to April 13th. While with us at this 

 season it has a most pleasing song. Passes us in the 

 autumn in October. 



92. Passer domestica, LEACH. European House 

 Sparrow. Introduced, but common already in localities ; 

 will soon, without doubt, be generally distributed. 



93. Euspiza Americana, BON. Black-throated Bunt- 

 ing. Very "rare summer visitor, or straggler, from the 

 south. My young friend, John Thaxter, shot a specimen 

 June 26, 1867 ; it was a female, and, as I should judge, 

 from the peculiar appearance of the ovaries and oviduct, 

 had laid her eggs ; while the bare and swollen appearance 

 of her breast seemed to indicate that she was incubating. 

 Mr. Samuels speaks of two instances of its capture.* 



94. Guiraca Ludoviciana, SWAIN. Rose-breasted 

 Grosbeak. Common summer resident. Breeds, nesting in 

 trees and bushes. Arrives from May 8th to 22d ; leaves 

 early in September. Frequents open woods. 



The Blue Grosbeak (Guiraca ccerulea, Swain.) perhaps 

 rarely occurs ; it has been taken in Calais, Maine, " where 

 it is very uncertain, but was common in the spring of 

 1861." f 



95. Cyanospiza cyanea, BAIRD. Indigo-Bird. 

 Common summer resident. Breeds, nesting in low bushes. 

 Arrives from May 10th to 22d ; in autumn found in flocks 



* " Ornithology and Oology of New England," p. 328. 



t G. A. Boardman, " Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural His- 

 tory," IX. p. 127; J. A. Allen, " Proceedings of the Essex Institute," IV. 

 1864, pp. 84, 85. 



