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THE BL EE- THE OA TED WA RBLER. 
While hopping and feeding about the ground, it is wonderful to see what large worms 
and insects the little bird will devour. Should the worm be too large for him to swallow 
entire, as indeed is mostly the case, he tosses it about with his beak, bangs it against the 
ground, flings it over his head, jumps on it, and when he has thus mashed it into a pulp, pulls 
it to bits, and devours it piecemeal. 
The color of the male Bobin is bright olive-brown on the back, orange-red on the throat, 
chin, breast, forehead, and round the eye. A stripe of blue-gray runs round the red, and the 
abdomen and lower part of the breast are white. The bill and eyes are black. The female 
is colored after the same manner, but the tints are not so vivid as in her mate. The total 
length of the bird is nearly six inches, and its weight about half an ounce. 
The Blue-throated Warbler is very common in the southern parts of Europe, but is 
extremely rare in the north. 
BLUE-THROATED WARBLER. — Cyanecula suecica ; and CALLIOPE . — Calliope kamtschalkensis. 
It is a sweet songster, the notes having some resemblance to those of the whinchat, but 
being more powerful. It prefers to haunt low-lying, marshy grounds, and places its nest 
among tufts of the rank herbage that generally grows in such localities. The nest is most 
carefully hidden, and cannot readily be discovered. The materials of which it is composed 
are dried grass and mosses, and it is lined with grass of a finer character. The eggs are 
greenish-blue, something like those of the redstart. The bird has a curious habit of rising 
into the air while singing, spreading its tail widely, and sailing with quivering wings and 
spread tail to a spot at some distance from that at which it rose. It begins its song early in 
the morning, and does not cease until late in the evening, being in this respect similar to the 
redbreast. 
The color of this bird is rather varied, and is briefly as follows : The upper part of the 
body is rich brown, a color which extends to the two central tail-feathers, all the other rectrices 
being bright chestnut at the basal half, and black at the extremity. The chin, throat, and 
