ALAUDA ARVEN SI S, Linn.
Sky-Lark.
Alauda arvensis, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 76.
italica, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 793.
vulgaris, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Coll. Brit. Mus., p. 21.
ccelipeta, Pall. Zoog. Rosso-Asiat., tom. i. p. 524.
segetum, Brehm, Vög. Deutsch!., p. 318.
montana, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 319, tab. 20. fig. 1.
agrestis, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 320.
I t cannot l>e expected that anything I may attempt to say respecting the history of a bird so well known as
the Sky-Lark will he imbued"with novelty. From the days of Chancer and Spenser nearly every :poet of
eminence has alluded to its charming song, and every writer, although unimbued with poetic feeling, has very
correctly described its habits, disposition, and economy. Some authors have dwelt upon its value as a bird
for the cage and the aviary, and its consequent importance as an article of commerce ; while others
have dilated upon its qualities as a viand for the table, and displayed their talents in detailing how a
dozen larks may be made into one of the most recherché of dishes. For me to rhapsodize on the
aerial song and other pleasing traits of the Sky-Lark would be absurd, since poems and verses on this
head are almost innumerable, many of them written with much feeling, and exquisite beauty of expression.
“ The busy larke, messenger of daye,
Saluteth, in her song, the momine gay ;
And fyry Phcebus ryseth up so bright,
That all the orient laugheth of the light.”—Chaucers Kniglits Tale.
“ Wake now, my love, awake ! for it is time !
» * * * * «
The merry larké her matins sings aloft,
The thrush replyes, the mavis descant playes.”—Spencer’s Epithalamion.
“ Lo ! here the gentle lark, weary of rest,
From his moist cabinet mounts up on high,
And watches the morning, from whose silver breast
The sun ariseth in his majesty.”—Shakespeare.
“ Now laverocks wake the merry mom,
Aloft on dewy wing.”—Burns.
The Sky-Lark is universally dispersed over the British Islands, but is less numerous in the Western Isles,
the Orcades and the extreme north of Scotland, than elsewhere, especially during the months of winter.
In autumn our climate, generally more humid and milder than that of the continent, attracts great
numbers of Larks to our shores; and hence enormous flocks may, at this period, be seen congregated
together in many parts of the country, but more especially in the central districts. Winter being over,
these foreign Larks again cross the channel, and return to the summer home where they were bred and
reared; while our stay-at-home birds take up their quarters in arable lands, wild heaths, and moorlands ;
and, before the regular migrants have arrived, they have paired, and the exuberant song of the male
is attuned in joyous strains, which daily increase in volubility until the female has commenced the (ask
of incubation; and then it is that the male, d a i l y mounting higher and higher in the air, becomes lost
1 ecstasy, and during his ascents pours forth his song to the delight of his mate as well as of the
lover of nature. After the female has performed her natural duty, no such solace is requisite; for both
parents are now happy in assiduously attending their young until they are able to live by themselves.
If summer be not in its wane, a second nesting takes place, and a similar result follows. The male forsakes
the ground, ascends again in the air, and cheers the female during her second brooding.
I When the weather is fine,” says the Rev. C. A. Johns, | its song may be heard throughout
o f the land. Rising, as it were, by a sudden impulse from its nest o r lowly retreat, the bird bursts forth, while
yet but a few feet from the ground, into exuberant song, and with its head turned towards I e breeze ; now
L e n d in g perpendicularly, and now veering to the right o r left, but not describing circles, it pours forth an
unbrokeif strain of melody until it has reached an elevation computed to be a t the most, about a thousand
feet. To an observer on earth it has dwindled to the size of a mere speck, but, as far as my experience
goes, it never rises so high as to defy the search of a keen eye. Having reached its highest elevation, its