whither it resorts in the cold season from Siberia and the high plains o f Central Asia ; and Mr. Swinhoe
states that he has seen specimens from Pekin, Amoy, and Foochow, in China.
Much difference occurs in the size and colouring o f the sexes : Latham states that the male weighs five,
and the female nine ounces. The former is distinguished by the blue colouring o f the upper surface and
the broad band at the extremity o f the tail, while the latter is usually browner, transversely rayed with a
darker colour on the back, and the tail is crossed with distinct bars o f pale buff; in some very old individuals
o f this sex a wash o f blue, similar to that o f the male, is found to occur on the back and rump. The young
differ from the adults in being more suffused with reddish brown, particularly the striae down the breast.
The strength o f the female corresponding with her greater size, she is said to attack much larger birds
than her mate, and, if pressed by hunger, to strike down a Partridge o r a Pigeon.
The Merlin is frequently employed in the sport o f Falconry, and is flown at the Lark, the Thrush, and the
Blackbird—in former times, however, rather for the amusement o f the lady than o f her lord, whose pride
was in his well-trained Falcon and Tiercel. “ A gentleman, residing a t Moyallen (county o f Down),” says
Mr. Thompson, “ who has Merlins trained for the chase, frequently flies them at tame pigeons, which they kill
well. Mr. W. Sinclaire has remarked to me that, when living-prey was given to his Merlins, they instantaneously
extinguished life, whether or not they at the same time began feeding; while, under similar circumstances,
the Peregrine Falcon has retained a bird in his grasp for some time, putting an end to its existence
,only when urged by hunger, though, like the Merlin, when it did commence, the most vital part was invariably
first £ entered upon.’ His Sparrow-Hawks, it need hardly be added, began feeding indiscriminately
on any pa rt of the living objects offered them.”
Although I did not succeed in finding the nest o f the Merlin when I visited the Dovrefjeld, I am certain
that the bird was then engaged in feeding its y oung; for the old birds passed and repassed certain parts of
the moor with a degree o f regularity that attracted my attention; and as I sat on a stone watching them,
I ¡observed that they always took the same ¡direction coming and going from the ¡scrubby parts o f the country
to the hill-side. The kind o f food they carried home I was unable to ascertain; probably small birds. I did
not perceive that they ever attacked the Fieldfare o r the Redwing, although these were plentiful in the
immediate neighbourhood.
Mr. Alfred Newton, writing o f the series o f Merlin’s eggs contained in the ‘ Ootheca Wolleyana,’ states
that it is “ selected from about two hundred trustworthy specimens, more than three-fourths o f which have
been simultaneously compared in forming it. As it stands, it may therefore be held a fair representation
o f what the eggs o f this species are really like. There are not many specimens in it which, taken singly,
could be pronounced, from their appearance alone, to be certainly Merlins?; but, taken as a whole, a purple
tint is seen to be prevalent, which is not discernible in the series o f Kestrels’ eggs lying in the same drawer,
while the average size of these latter is also greater. I t will be seen that the Merlin is also one o f those
birds of prey which are not constant in the choice of a locality for their nests, sometimes breeding (as in
the British Islands is, I believe, its usual habit) on the ground, a t others in trees.” I t also appears from the
same work, that in Northern Lapland Mr. Wolley found the Merlin not unfrequently using the old nests of
the Rough-legged Buzzard, which are built in high trees, for its own purposes.
Speaking o f the Merlin, as seen by him in the Quickiock district, between 400 and 500 miles north o f the
Dovrefjeld, Mr. Wheelwright says it was the common Hawk, and must have been one o f the early spring
migrants; for he shot a female on the 19th o f April. “ It was impossible to walk on the fells w ithout meeting
this bold and p retty Hawk, which I have even seen chasing the Ptarmigan. I never found the nest here anywhere
but on the ground, either on a bare cliff or in the heather, always on tolerably high fells. The earliest taken
was on Ju n e the 9th. When first laid, the eggs have a beautiful violet-red tinge, with reddish-brown spots •
tins, however, soon fades, and they become o f a reddish-brown hue, with dirty-brown spots. The Laps say
that it sometimes builds in trees. The eggs appear to vary in number from four to s ix ; and so much do
they resemble those o f the Kestrel, though generally a trifle smaller, that the two mingled together could
never be accurately separated, unless each egg had been numbered."
“ During flight,” says Macgilbvray, “ this species sweeps along at no great height, glides over the fields
shoots by the edge of the wood, examines the thorn fence, and sometimes alights on a tree or wall, as if to
survey the ground. Although it may occasionally pounce on a partridge, it usually preys on smaller birds
such as larks, thrushes, chaffinches, sandpipers, snipes, and plovers.”
The Plate represents a male and a female, with their four young o f a few days old, o f the size o f life.