these birds, their outcries presently bring a band o f enemies around it. But although the Barn-owl is thus
so imbecile by day as to suffer itself to be insulted with impunity by the pettiest aggressor, it assumes a very
diffeient character when darkness restores to it the faculty o f clearly distinguishing objects.
“ By watching near its haunts, or taking up a station in the neighbourhood o f some farm-steading frequented
by if, one may dimly see it advance with silent and gliding flight, skimming over the fields, shooting
along the hedge-bank, deviating this way and that, and now perhaps sweeping overhead, without causing
the slightest sound by the flappings o f its downy wings. On perceiving an object, it drops to the ground,
secures its prey in a moment, and, uttering a shrill cry, flies off with it in its claws. Jn a little time it
returns, and thus continues prowling about the farmyard for hours. The domestic Mouse, Wood-mouse
common Arvicola, Shrew, Lark, and young birds of different species are the objects which I have found in
tts stomach. The mice are generally swallowed entire, often without their bones being broken ; but the birds
are torn to pieces. Young hares and rabbits, as well as lepidopterous and coleopterous insects, are said to
form part of its food; and Mr. Waterton informs us that it carries off rats, and occasionally catches fish.
‘ Some years ago,' he says, ‘ on a fine evening in July, long before it was dark, as I was standing on the
middle of the bridge, and minuting the Owl by my watch, as she brought mice into her nest; all on a
sudden she dropt perpendicularly into the water. Thinking she had fallen down in epilepsy, my first thoughts
were to go and fetch the b o a t; but before I had well got to the end of the bridge I saw the Owl rise out of
the water, with a fish in her claws, and take it to the nest.’ It has been alleged that it does not prey on
Shrews ; but I have found four skulls o f these animals, along with two of an Arvicola, in the stomach o f one.
le number it swallows may seem surprising to a persou who does not consider how many mice may be
squeezed into a sack two inches in diameter. Remains o f eight or ten animals may sometimes be found in
its stomach, but in various degrees of decomposition, the greater part of some having passed into the intestine
before the rest have been procured. The skulls and other bones, enveloped in the hair, are ejected in
pe ets after the bird has retired to its resting-place. ‘ When it has young/ says Waterton, ‘ the Barn-Owl
will bring a mouse to its nest about every twelve or fifteen minutes. But in order to have a proper idea
of the enormous uumber of mice which this bird destroys, we must examine the pellets which it ejects from
its stomach, in the place of its retreat. Every pellet contains from four to seven skeletons o f mice In
sixteen months from the time that the apartment o f the Owl on the old gateway was cleaned out, there has
been a deposit of above a bushel o f pellets.’”
The sexual difference is not very apparent, for externally the male and female are very similar. The
young, during the first three or four weeks o f their existence, are clothed in an immaculate white down •
next come feathers, first in the form o f a frill round the face, then the primaries appear; and by the end of
six weeks, the brood, which is generally four in number, are very like the adults ; sometimes however a
tawny tint pervades the breast and under surface, while usually these parts are pure white. Mr. Stevenson
states, in his ‘Birds of Norfolk, that a dark variety, supposed to be migrants from the Danish Islands sometimes
occurs ,n tins country; an example o f this variety, if I imagine rightly, was kindly shot for me by the
E ar of Ducie, on the flth of October, 1868, at his seat a t Sarsden, in Oxfordshire, and is a t once the
smallest and most beautifully marked Owl I have ever seen I all the under surface was delicate buff, numerously
speckled With g r e y ; ,t weighed 8* ounces, measured 1 1 inches in length, 27 inches from tip to tip
of the wings; the length o f the wing from the tarsal joint was 10 / inches, o f the tail 4/ , and the tarsi V- ■
it was apparently a fully adult bird, and dissection proved it to be a female. I have little doubt it was'a
migrant, as ,t rose out o f a d,y ditch at 3 o’clock in the afternoon, and had two freshly caught field-mice in
its stomach To test the verity of this opinion, I asked Lord Ducie to have another Owl shot in the
same neighbourhood; and on the 18th of November a female was sent me which proved to be of the ordinary
kind. In this specimen all the under surface was snow-white, with a few specks of grey on the flanks
and under the shoulders i its weight was 1 2 * ounces; the expanse of its wings 29 inches, the length o f the
wing from the carpal jom. 10, of the tail 4*. and o f the tarsi 2 f ; this was in every respect a very different
bird from the buff-coloured one which preceded it. Mr. Henry Shaw, of Shrewsbury, who has paid great
attention to the change o f plumage undergone by various birds, writes to m e - “ From experience and dis-
section I have found all the young female Owls to be more or less spotted, their wings strongly marked
and webs o f the first qudl feathers broader than when the bird is a d u lt; they are also a trifle longer than
the corresponding feathers m the opposite sex. The males have the breast white from the nest, and the
markings of the wmgs and hack less numerous. In the adults o f both sexes the markings decrease as
they advance in years ; and very old males entirely lose the markings o f the quills.”
The eggs which are four or five in number, are pare white, and differ considerably in form, some being
much more lengthened than others. ®
I he figures, whieh represent old and young, are o f the size o f life.