example, was purchased at a poulterer’s shop In London in 1836, in which year a third was killed in Kent; 
a fourth was shot at Hunmanhy, near Scarhorough, the seat of my excellent old friend Admiral Mitford, in 
1847, and the fifth near Marsden, in the comity of Durham, in 1848; the only Scottish example was killed 
at Spinningdale, in Sutherlandshire, in May 1847. For the knowledge of a sixth British example I am in- 
debted to the kindness of the Rev. George Weare Braikenridge, who sent me the following extract from a 
letter addressed to him by Charles Edwards, Esq., of the Grove, Wrington, Somersetshire: — “The Teng- 
malm’s Owl in my collection was killed at M'^inscomhe, on the north side of the Mendip Hills, about six miles 
from hence, in the winter of 1859-60; and I had it in the flesh the same day from the person who shot it. 
Two were seen ; but although I offered for the second, it could not be procured.” 
Badly, in his ‘ Ornithologie de la Savoie,’ says, “ Tengmalm’s Owl Inhabits the more thickly wooded districts 
of Switzerland, especially those of the Valais and the lower part of the Jura ; and that it is also common in the 
northern parts of Savoy, particularly in the thick woods of larch and fir in the neighbourhood of Albertville, the 
whole of the Tarentaise, the Maurienne, and Chamounix, and remains there all the year round. It does not affect 
old buildings and the interior of towers, like the Little Owl, hut prefers the solitude of the thick woods of the 
mountains, particularly those in which it can find old and hollow pine trees wherein it may hide itself during 
the day, and the female deposit her eggs. There it continues to dwell all the summer, the greatest part of 
autumn, and, whenever the weather may continue mild, the greater part of winter. At all times, but espe- 
cially when it has its young to feed, it kills great numbers of the smaller birds, such as warblers, tits, 
SiC., which abound in the thick woods spoken of. It pairs at the end of March or the beoinnino- 
of April ; but the eggs are not laid until early in May in the woods or the middle part of the 
mountains, and not until the 5th or 10th of June in the more recluse forests. The eggs, which are 
four or five in number, are placed on the rotten dust at the bottom of a hole in a tree, a fir tree being gene- 
rally preferred ; they are of a dull white, stained occasionally with the hue of the damp material on which 
they are laid. The bird does not quit the mountain forests until snow and the intensity of the cold has 
compelled the small birds upon which it feeds to seek more genial localities ; it then roves about at night 
in the woods of the low hills and plains, and in dull weather may he seen fluttering about at midday. 
Besides birds it devours insects, particularly beetles, grasshoppers, the sphinx, and other large twilight- 
loving moths, lizards, and slugs, which it finds among grass, hushes, and stones, and on small quadrupeds 
frogs and their spawn, and terrestrial mollusca, which it hunts for in the fields, meadows, and fens. It is 
easily domesticated, if it he not allowed to suflfer from hunger. One kept by Mr. Thabuis, at Moutiers, in 
1852, evinced a great partiality for He/ieV pomatia, H. hortensis, and several other mollusks when given fresh, 
and preferred them to pieces of raw meat.” 
Mr. Wolley obtained eggs of this bird during his stay in Lapland. Some of them were found in tyllas, i. e. 
the egg-boxes set up by the inhabitants for the use of the Golden-eyed Duck and other aquatic birds ; while 
others were taken from a hole made by the Black Woodpecker, Picus martius, in a Scotch fir, at about seven 
or eight feet from the ground. 
It has been remarked by Wheelwright that “ whenever this Owl has appeared during autumn in the very 
south of Sweden a severe winter has always followed. It occupies in the Quickiock forest precisely the 
same range as the Hawk Owl, and we never saw one on the fell sides higher than the fir region. It is a 
bold voracious bird; one night I shot a female in full chase after lemming on a frozen lake; and another 
female, which I caught on her eggs in ’Wermland and placed in a fishing-creel, had, by the time I reached 
home, nearly devoured a tit-mouse I had thrown in, I kept this bird for a long time in a cage; she became 
very tame, and was a very pretty little pet. The call-note is a very musical soft whistle, never heard except 
in the evening and night. I could never detect the slightest difference. 
“ Next to the Hawk Owl, Tengmalm’s is the commonest species found in the Lapland forests ; but, 
being much more nocturnal in its habits, is not so often seen ; not that the light appears to affect its 
vision, for there the summer nights are as light as day; and we rarely went into the forest any night 
Avithout seeing this pretty little Ow l hawdving after its prey. Its eggs vary much in shape, but not so 
much in size. In the same hole you will find some as round as musket-balls, others oval and elongated; 
The usual size is about 1’ by I inch. This species has a much more southern range than the Hawk Owl, 
for w e not unfrequently take eggs in Wermland ; but, strange to say, they are met with only about every 
third year.” 
The Plate represents the bird of the natural size, with a Haiwest Mouse {JSIus messorrus) in its bill. 
