: oa 
Ov BARDS | Pv] 
‘ ae fhrub or hedge, and the female lays fix blucifh 
green eges, {potted with black. 
Redwings, common Thruthes, and Fiddees, | 
abound fo much, and are killed in fuch numbers 
_ forthe markets in Polifh Pruffia, that a tax has 
‘been: paid for ae at Dasttzic only, in one 
feslon, LC ee ead Bocas 
THe THROSTLE, 
The wing hall are dln atl at, ae bafe, ‘on a the 
infide ; the under part of its body. 1s fpotted, the {pots are 
ea like the heads 2 arrows, with theiz pen upward, 
2 This is" one’ + of our ‘ fineft fong: birds, and 
dies the. longeft.. It begins-its melodious warb- 
il the end ‘of - autumn, Perched upon fome 
high: tree, it amufes us in our walks with its 
- delichtful fong. 
* With us the Thrufh is not wrebarions) and 
though it semain in England: all the year, 
| poflibly it may go from one part to another, 
at the approach of Winter, or retire into the 
woods, In FranceThruthes are migratoryjappear= 
ing in Burgundy twice a year:’firft in ‘April, 
and: leaving it in | May ; 3 and again at the vintage, 
when - 
\ 
ding early in thes fpringy/and continues’ un- 
