AMERICAN GOLDFINCH. 
YELLOW BIRD. THISTLE BIRD. THISTLE FINCH. WILD 
CANARY. 
SPINUS TRISTIS. 
CuHar. Male in summer: bright gamboge yellow; crown, wings, and 
tail black; upper and under tail-coverts, wing and tail markings, white. 
In winter the male resembles the female, though with less olive tint. 
Female: above, olive brown; below, paler or yellowish; forehead with- 
out black ; wings and tail much the same as in the male. Length about 
434 inches. 
Vest. Ina pasture or orchard; usually placed in a crotch of a decidu- 
ous tree Io to 20 feet from the ground; a compact and gracefully formed 
cup, made of grass and vegetable fibre, lined with grass and plant down, 
and often with hair. : 
£ggs. 3-6; white with tint of green or greenish blue, occasionally 
marked with faint spots of brown; 0.65 X 0.50. 
This common, active, and gregarious Goldfinch is a very 
general inhabitant of the United States. It is also found in 
summer in the remote interior of Canada, in the fur countries 
and near Lake Winnipique, in the 49th degree of latitude, as 
well as in the remote territory of Oregon and the Rocky 
Mountains, on the banks of Lewis’s River, where I found the 
nest as usual with white eggs. On the other hand, it is also 
met with in Mexico, and even in Guiana and Surinam in trop- 
ical America, where it frequents the savannas. Although 
many of these birds which spend the summer here leave at 
the approach of winter, yet hungry flocks are seen to arrive in 
