26 PHEASANTS FOB C OVERT S AND AVIARIES. 



Tinder similar circumstances, Dick is easily checked. He is 

 fond of stretcliing himself in the sunbeams ; and if this be 

 not attainable, before the kitchen fire. On being taken into 

 the house he was presented to the view of the cat, the latter 

 at the same time given to understand that the bird was 

 privileged, and that she must not disturb him. The cat is 

 ■evidently not fond of Dick as an inmate, but she abstains 

 from violence. I have seen her, it is true, give him a blow 

 with her paw, but this only occurs when the bird attempts to 

 take bread, &c., from her; and not always then, as she 

 frequently suffers herself to be robbed by him. Dick has also 

 made friends with my pointers. He sleeps in my bed- 

 room, but is by no means so early a riser as his fraternity in 

 a state of nature ; however, when he comes forth his antics 

 are amusing enough; he shakes himself, jumps and flies 

 .about the room for several minutes, and then descends into 

 rthe breakfast-room." Whether this bird would or would not 

 have continued tame and domesticated during the following 

 ■breeding season "was unfortunately never ascertained, as it 

 partook of the fate of most pets, and was killed accidentally 

 hj the opening of a door. 



The incapacity of pheasants for domestication has been 

 Temarked by all those who have tried in vain to rear them as 

 -domestic birds. Mr. Charles Waterton, of Walton Hall, York- 

 ;shire, who died in 1865, made the attempt under most advan- 

 tageous circumstances, and thus recounts the results of his 

 •experiments : " Notwithstanding the proximity of the pheasant 

 •to the nature of the barndoor fowl, still it has that within it 

 which baffles every attempt on our part to render its domesti- 

 -cation complete. What I allude to is, a most singular innate 

 timidity, which never fails to show itself on the sudden and 

 abrupt appearance of an object. I spent some months in 

 trying to overcome this timorous propensity in the pheasant, 

 but I failed completely in the attempt. The young birds, which 

 ihad been hatched under a domestic hen, soon became very 

 tame, and would even receive food from the hand when it was 



