INTRODUCTION. 19 



characters of objects are useful and interesting. To such 

 persons a manual, like the present, containing a very con- 

 densed history of the species, is of importance, as it en- 

 ables them readily to discover the name of any particular 

 bird, and consequently to refer to any more extended work 

 for further information, should they desire it. Persons 

 having studied birds at intervals, as opportunities have 

 occurred, and having thus acquired considerable, though 

 disjointed, information, will also find it beneficial to refer 

 frequently to a general systematic catalogue, including the 

 essential characters of the species, genera, and families. 

 Students or collectors, making excursions to distant places, 

 and not finding it conveniint to carry large treatises with 

 them, will also be benefited by such a catalogue. In short, 

 the uses of manuals like the present are numerous, and so 

 obvious, that it is unnecessary to say more regarding them. 

 Only, let the student not be satisfied with the little which 

 they contain, but use them as a means of acquiring more 

 knowledge, and of connecting and systematizing what he has 

 already obtained. 



In all sciences and arts, peculiar terms must be employed, 

 and parts must be intelligibly defined. For the use of per- 

 sons commencing the study, or not very proficient in it, I 

 shall here present such explanations as will enable them to 

 apply the characteristic phrases employed to the objects 

 which they describe. 



Birds are warm-blooded, oviparous, vertebrate animals. 

 They have a brain, enclosed within a skull, a spinal marrow, 

 protected by vertebrae, nerves issuing from these central 

 parts, and distributed to all the organs. Their heart is 

 double, one side of it receiving the blood from the veins, 

 and sending it out by the pulmonary artery into the lungs, 

 whence, on being subjected to the influence of the air, it re- 

 turns by the pulmonary veins to the other side of the heart, 

 which transmits it, by the aorta, to all parts of the body. 



