198 NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE. 
house-martins retire, to a bird, about the beginning of October ; 
so that a person not very observant of such matters would con- 
clude that they had taken their last farewell : but then it may 
be seen in my diaries also that considerable flocks have disco- 
vered themselves again in the first week of November, and often 
on the fourth day of that month only for one day ; and that not 
as if they were in actual migration, but playing about at their 
leisure and feeding calmly, as if no ent^rprize of mome^nt at all 
agitated their spirits. And this was the case in the beginning 
of this very month ; for, on the fourth of November, more than 
twenty house-martins, which, in appearance, had all departed 
about the seventh of October, were seen again, for that one morn- 
ing only, sporting between my fields and the Hanger, and feast- 
ing on insects which swarmed in that sheltered district. The 
preceding day was wet and blustering, but the fourth was dark 
and mild, and soft, the wind at south-west, and the thermometer 
at 58i ; a pitch not common at that season of the year. More- 
over, it may not be amiss to add in this place, that whenever 
the thermometer is above 50 the bat comes flitting out in every 
autumnal and winter-month. 
From all these circumstances laid together, it is obvious that 
torpid insects, reptiles, and quadrupeds, are awakened from their 
profoundest slumbers by a little untimely warmth ; and there- 
fore that nothing so much prom.otes this death-like stupor as a 
defect of heat. And further, it is reasonable to suppose that 
two whole species, or at least many individuals of those two 
species, of British hirundines, do never leave this island at all, 
but partake of the same benumbed state : for we cannot suppose 
that, after a month's absence, house-martins can return from 
southern regions to appear for one morning in November, or that 
house-swallows should leave the districts of Africa to enjoy, in 
March, the transient summer of a couple of days.* 
I am, &c. 
LETTER XXXVII. To the Hon. DAINES BARRINGTON. 
DEAR SIR, Selhorne, Jan. 8, 1778. 
There was in this village several years ago a miserable pauper, 
* The former had of course arrived from some more northern part of the king:dom, and the 
latter had in all likelihood (Tossed the ocean with the same southerly breezes which had brought 
the summer weather As in all probability these last were not Selborne birds, they most likely 
continued their course to the homes they bad left the previous autumn,— Ed. 
