EOBIN EEDBEEAST. 
The Eedbreast, or Eobin Eedbreast, as 
it is affectionately termed, has, by its 
fearless conduct. Earned itself golden opin- 
ions from all kinds of men. Every nation 
seems to protect it. Even the American 
Eedbreast lives unharmed, possibly on 
account of its connexion with its English 
relation, whose oft-told charity towards 
the Babes in the Wood has turned aside 
from its posterity even the unsparing 
hand of the sporting schoolboy. In the 
winter, when the berries are gone, insects 
dead, and the worms hidden under the 
hard frozen soil, then the Eobin flies for 
