20 
WILD SCENES AND SONG BIRDS. 
tear at some liver hanging on the fence rails, and down lie 
would dip as quick as lightning, behind the wood-pile next 
the fence, and when I would fire impatiently with the hope 
to secure him, he would flj, cawing, off, rising in triumph 
to the tops of the highest trees, with his prey in his mouth. 
This was repeated day after day, for nearly a week, with 
about the same results, he still returning in unyielding au- 
dacity for his prey, in the teeth of all my threatening efforts. 
I had sworn vengeance against this particular crow, and at 
last hit upon what I conceived to be an admirable expedient. 
I put up a little board house near the corner where he fed, 
and having formed it large enough to conceal my body, 
made a small esquimaux ambuscade, or hunting-lodge of it, 
by covering it above, and on all side^s, with snow, leaving a 
little loop-hole, chinked with snow, that could easily be 
pushed out with my gun-barrel, and a small window, through 
which I could barely see the place where I expected the crow 
to alight, and where I had placed a most tempting great 
piece of liver for a bait. 
I had studiously accomplished this work between sundown 
and dusk, the time Avhen the crows had all gone to roost. In 
the morning, about 10 o'clock, I crawled into my hunting- 
lodge, thinking I should have him now for sure ; I had to 
sit not more than an hour, when, with palpitating heart, I 
heard above me his noisy caw. I had concealed my body 
carefully, because I knew he inspected, while on the wing, 
all the premises. He approached my old hiding-place very 
cautiously, mounting high in the air ; when seeming to be 
satisfied, he poised himself for a moment, and came down 
in a slanting direction towards the liver, with something of 
the quick movement of a hawk's swoop — I clutched my gun, 
preparing to fire the moment he should alight. He had to 
pass, of course, near my little lodge, that I thought had been 
so dexterously concealed, in imitation of a pile of wood and 
snow, but, while yet on the swoop, the crow seeing, I suppose, 
that there was something suspicious in that corner of the wood, 
