very similar to those of the ordinary-sized Common Snipe, but the plumage was altogether o f a more ruddy
cast, and the light stripes on the scapularies were narrower and much less conspicuous. The bill and the
tarsi especially appear very short when compared with the large size of the body. All sportsmen who have
killed the bird remark that it rises without noise.”
I f these birds should ultimately prove to belong to a distinct species, I would propose for it the scientific
appellation of Gallinago russata, and the trivial one of Russet Snipe, in allusion to its rufous colouring.
To add my mite of recommendation o f the Snipe as a bird for the table would be superfluous, since it is
very generally agreed that it is second to none of our British birds in this respect. As an object of sport,
no bird is more highly esteemed ; for where is the sportsman who would not walk a g reat distance for a
chance shot at a Snipe ?
I have mentioned above that the Snipe is a resident species; by this I mean that it breeds with us. It
will be necessary, however, to enumerate some of the places, and the character of the localities, which it
frequents; and this may be done in a few words. In every swampy situation covered with rushes and rank
herbage, on Dartmoor, Exmoor, in the New Forest, the edges o f Frencham and other ponds on the great
commons near Farnham in Surrey, Bagshot Heath, and all suitable localities in Derbyshire and Wales,
a hundred places in the north of England, and every part of Scotland and Ireland, if sufficiently quiet and
undisturbed, this bird may be heard bleating in the month of March. In April the female engaged in
incubating her four large eggs, may be found-; and by the end of the month the young are hatched.
The figures o f the young in the accompanying Plate were drawn from specimens sent to me alive by Sir
John H. Crewe, from one of his estates in Derbyshire, and were forwarded with so much care that they
reached London in safety; by this means I was enabled to give a correct representation o f them, which I
could not otherwise have doue, for these delicate little creatures begin to decompose from the moment of
their death. Besides the young, Sir John Crewe’s head keeper, Mr. W. Turner, sent me the parent birds
also alive; and the accompanying illustration may therefore be considered as complete as any I have yet
published. I was very much puzzled by the peculiar grey colouring which pervaded the throat and sides of
the face of these breeding birds. Thinking this might be due to some extraneous cause, such as a peculiarity
in the soil or water of the neighbourhood where the bird bad been incubating, I wrote to Mr. Turner
on the subject. In reply he says, “ I observe that a marked difference in the colouring o f the Snipe takes
place soon after they begin to breed. The bright colours about the head and under the throat, with which it
is decorated in winter, give place in summer to a dirty ash-colour. I do not think it is due to the birds
feeding on peat lan d ; for we have many which breed where there is no peat, and I observe that all present
the same appearance at this season o f the year.” This is not in accordance with my own observations, for I
have not seen them thus coloured from any other locality. The young, as will he seen by my figures, are
as rich in their colours as they are fantastical in their markings; even in this downy and youthful state, the
young Snipes sprawl about among the herbage with considerable activity. It will also be seen that the nest
is a very slight affair, composed of grasses, delicate shreds of rushes, &c., placed in a small tuft o f grass in
the middle of a swamp.
A considerable controversy has been carried on respecting the manner in which the “ bleating ” o f the
Snipe is produced, some persons being of opinion that it is due to the resistance offered to the air by the
stiff and curved outer feather of the tail while the bird is rapidly descending; but this has not been very
satisfactorily ascertained. On this p art of the bird’s economy I extract the following note from an
interesting little volume by the Rev. J . C. Atkinson, entitled ‘British Birds’ Eggs and Nests.’ Speaking
of the Snipe, this gentleman says:— “ It is a bird, moreover, which is quite sure to make it very distinctly
known that it has a nest and eggs somewhere near, if any human visitor appears on the scene. I refer
to the very peculiar note or sound emitted by the male, always while he is on the wing high in the air,
and always accompanied with a very remarkable action of his wings and curving descent in his flight. This
sound or note (for it is not absolutely certain, I think, how it is produced) is variously called humming,
bleating, drumming, buzzing. To me, the first time I heard it, and before I knew to what origin to assign
it, the impression produced was precisely that o f a large bee, entangled in some particular place and
unable to extricate itself; and I remember spending some minutes in trying to discover the supposed insect.
The eggs are usually four, placed in a very slight and inartificial nest on the ground near some tuft of rushes
or other water-herbage. They are of a greenish-olive hue, blotched and spotted with two o r three shades
of brown, the deepest being very dark. The old ones are said to be very jealous and careful o f their young.”
The Plate represents a male, a female, four young birds, and a nest, all o f the natural size.