178 BRITISH BIRDS, WITH THEIR NESTS AND EGGS. 
three best singers as cage birds; one of these I finally retained, parting with the 
remainder to friends. This bird was always tame and healthy: he lived in a two 
foot “runner,” half turfed and half sanded; he was a grand singer, producing the 
wild song so perfectly, that if you shut your eyes you could imagine his upward 
flight, and finally his dropping notes as he returned to earth. Towards the end 
of 1895 he failed to get well through his moult, and one morning I found him 
dead with his head under his wing. 
Mr. Seebohm’s account of the migration of Sky-Larks as observed by him in 
Heligoland is exceedingly interesting ; but unfortunately I have not space to quote 
it here. Speaking of the complaints respecting the diminution of birds, Herr 
Gatke says:—‘‘To a witness, however, of the enormous passage of migrants, of 
the myriads of individuals which on autumn nights travel past this island, like 
the flakes of a snow-storm, not only within the area of the lighthouse, but for 
miles north and south out to sea, these complaints seem quite incomprehensible. 
It is surely impossible that the hand of man can exercise any perceptible influence 
on such enormous migration streams’’; and he adds that the number of 15,000 
Larks caught in one autumn night does not approximately express a proportion 
of one for each 10,000 individuals of such a migrant stream. 
The figures of eggs 245-8 are from Mr. A. B. Farn’s collection; 249 from 
Mr. Frohawk’s, and 250-4 from the author’s series. 
Family—ALAUDID:. 
THE Woop-LarK. 
Alauda arborea, LAXN. 
“TN summer the Wood-Lark inhabits the southern portions of Scandinavia, and 
Russia below about 60° N. lat., as far east as the Ural Mountains, while in 
Northern Germany it is common. Southward, it is found in places suited to its 
habits—especially in Central France—down to the Mediterranean, Black and 
