178 RED-HEADED WOODPECKER. 



sioned some European writers to mistake them for females ; the white 

 on the wing is also spotted with black ; but in the succeeding spring 

 they receive their perfect plumage, and the male and female then differ 

 only in the latter being rather smaller, and her colors not quite so vivid ; 

 both have the head and neck deep scarlet ; the bill light blue, black 

 towards the extremity, and strong ; back, primaries, wing-coverts and 

 tail, black, glossed with steel blue; rump, lower part of the back, 

 secondaries, and whole under parts, from the breast downwards, white ; 

 legs and feet bluish green ; claws light blue ; round the eye a dusky nar- 

 row skin, bare of feathers ; iris dark hazel ; total length nine inches 

 and a half, extent seventeen inches. The figure in the plate was drawn 

 and colored from a very elegant living specimen. 



Notwithstanding the care which this bird, in common with the rest of 

 its genus, takes to place its young beyond the reach of enemies, within 

 the hollows of trees ; yet there is one deadly foe, against whose depre- 

 dation's neither the height of the tree, nor the depth of the cavity, is 

 the least security. This is the Black Snake [Coluber constrictor), who 

 frequently glides up the trunk of the tree, and, like a skulking savage, 

 enters the Woodpecker's peaceful apartment, devours the eggs or help- 

 less young, in spite of the cries and flutterings of the parents ; and, if 

 the place be large enough, coils himself up in the spot they occupied, 

 where he will sometimes remain for several days. The eager school-boy, 

 after hazarding his neck to reach the Woodpecker's hole, at the triumph- 

 ant moment when he thinks the nestlings his own, and strips his arm, 

 lanching it down into the cavity, and grasping what he conceives to be 

 the callow young, starts with horror at the sight of a hideous snake, 

 and almost drops from his giddy pinnacle, retreating down the tree with 

 terror and precipitation. Several adventures of this kind have come 

 to my knowledge ; and one of them that was attended with serious con- 

 sequences ; where both snake and boy fell to the ground ; and a broken 

 thigh, and long confinement, cured the adventurer completely of his 

 ambition for robbing Woodpeckers' nests. 



