THE PERCHING-BIRDS 



521 



and when he lifted it out the notes fell like bubbles from the strings. . . . Away he launched, 

 and the meadow is all bespattered with melody." Where rice is extensi\'cly cultivated, however, 

 this bird is by no means so enthusiastically welcomed, causing immense destruction to the 

 standing crops — flocks numbering, it has been said, some millions alighting in the fields and 

 leaving too little grain to be worth the trouble of gathering. 



We pass now to a group of exceedingly interesting birds, some of which are remarkable 

 on account of the beauty of their plumage, others from their wonderful nesting-habits. Thv 

 group includes many familiar as cage-birds, such as the L()\(',-T.\ILED WiDOW-BIRDS, the RED- 

 BE.\KEu Waxbili.s, Amadav.vfs, Java Sparrow, Grass-finches, Munias, and so on, all of 

 which are embraced under the general title of Weaver-BIRDS, a name bestowed on account of 

 their peculiar nests. 



Photo by Dr. R iV. ShuftUt'] 



\^lVashingtQH 



MEADOW-LARK (NATURAL SIZE) 



Kno-wn alio as the Meaiioiv-starling. Tim bird, a natii'C of the Eastern United Stales, has occurred three limes in the British Islands, but 



it is doubtful ^whether these specimens ivere luild 



Abundant in Africa, and well represented in South-eastern Asia and Australia, these birds 

 bear a strong family resemblance to the Finches, from which they differ in having ten primary 

 quills in the wings. 



One of the most peculiar is the South African LoNG-TAlLED Whydah- or Wid(,)W-BIRD. 

 Strikingly coloured, this bird is rendered still more attractive by the extremely elongated tail- 

 feathers, which are many times longer than the body, so long, indeed, as to impede its flight, 

 which is so laboured that children commonly amuse themselves by running the bird down. 

 Kaffir children stretch lines coated with bird-lime near the ground across fields of millet and 

 Kaffir corn, and thereby capture many whose tails have become entangled among the threads. 



In brilliancy of coloration the Whydah-birds — for there are several species — are pressed hard 

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