AVES—SNIPE. 647 
sally known to oue sportsmen. During the day they keep to the woods and 
thickets, and at the approach of evening seek the springs and open watery 
places to feed in. They soon disperse themselves over the country, to breed. 
In the hot weather, they descend to the marshy shores of our rivers, their 
favorite springs and watery recesses inland, being chiefly dried up. To the 
former of these retreats they are pursued by the merciless sportsmen, flush- 
ed by dogs, and shct down in great numbers. The woodcock is properly a 
nocturnal bird, feeding chiefly at night, and seldom stirring about till after 
sunset; at such times he rises by a kind of spiral course to a considerable 
height in the air, uttering at times, a sudden quack, till having gained his 
utmost height, he hovers round in a wild, irregular manner, making a sort 
of murmuring sound, then descends with rapidity as he rose. When utter- 
ing his note on the ground, he seems to do it with difficulty, throwing his 
head towards the earth, and frequently jetting up his tail. Their food con- 
sists of larvee and other aquatic worms, for which, during the evening, they 
are almost continually turning over the leaves with their bill, or searching 
in the bogs. Their flesh is reckoned delicious and prized highly. 
The head of the woodcock is of singular conformation, and the eye is 
fixed at a remarkable distance from the bill, and high in the head. This” 
construction was necessary to give a greater range of vision, and to secure 
the eve from injury, while the owner is searching in the mire. The flight 
of this bird is slow. 
LHE SNIPE 2 

SNIPES are migratory birds, which are supposed to breed chiefly in the 
lower lands ot Germany and Switzerland. They visit England in autumn, 
and retire in the spring. Many, however, remain there the whole year, and 
make their nests of dried grass and feathers, in the most inaccessible parts 
of marshes. Our common snipe, usually called the English snipe, cif- 
fers but little, if at all, from the European snipe. They are most difficult 
to shoot, of all our birds, as they fly very rapidly, in zigzag lines. They 

1 Scolopax gallinago, Lix. 
