but should the chick of a Fowl or Pheasant or a duckling cross his path, a single stroke of his pointed bill
lays the little innocent dead a t his feet, almost without a kick or struggle; and many losses to the keeper
and the housewife have occurred which are not charged to the Moorhen. I was first made aware o f this
habit of the bird by one o f the keepers of Sir S. Morton Peto, Bart., a t Somerleyton; shortly afterwards I
read a similar statement in the ‘Zoologist;’ and in order to determine the truth o f these assertions, I
inquired of James Hunt, one o f the keepers of the Zoological Society, if such a habit in the bird had come
under his notice; and I soon .found all I had previously heard was true to the very letter. The following
is his r e p l y -■
“ In answer to your inquiries respecting the Moorhens in the ponds in these Gardens, I beg to say they
have always been very annoying and often destructive to young ducks. I have known them to kill
several of a hatch, and partly to pull them to pieces. If the old duck attempts to assist them, the Moorhen
immediately attacks, and sometimes mounts on her back, and continues tormenting her until she shakes it
off by main strength, or dives under water, and so gets clear. The Moorhen often takes possession o f the
nest-boxes fixed in the ponds, and builds her nest therein, when no bird, not even a Goose, dare approach
within some yards o f i t; in fact, the greater part of the time o f the Moorhen during the breeding-season is
taken up in annoying and tormenting the other birds in the; pond.” .
The following interesting extract from the ‘ Zoologist’ must close this part o f the Moorhen’s history.
“ At the beginning o f July;” says H. J . Partridge, Esq.,.of Hockham Hall, near Thetford, in,Norfolk, “ the
keeper having lost several Pheasants about three weeks old, from a copse, and having set traps in vain for
winged and four-footed vermin, determined to keep watch for the aggressor, when, after some time, a Moorhen
was seen walking about near the copse; the keeper supposing that, it only came to eat the young
Pheasants’ food, did not shoot it until he saw the Moorhen strike a Pheasant, which it killed immediately,
and devoured all the young bird, except the leg- and wing-bones. The remains agreed exactly with those, of
eight found before. Perfect confidence may be placed in the correctness of this statement.”
After this, let me say something more pleasing respecting the Moorhen, but before so doing direct the
reader’s attention to the accompanying Plate, whereon is depicted a newly hatched brood, one o f three or four
which are annually produced. That they are beautiful and interesting, no one, I think, will gainsay; yet how
seldom are they seen, and how little is the colouring of the bird during the first few days o f its existence
known! This may be attributed to two causes—one the situations in which the nest is placed, the other the
very short period (at most four or five days) during which this peculiar colouring is retained. Immediately on
emerging from the shell, these infant birds take to the water, and follow their parents through labyrinths of
thick and tangled herbage, a t one pa rt of the day sunning themselves on the prostrate rushes, at another
threading the floating leaves of the water-lilies, both yellow and white; as night approaches, their sensitiveness
to cold prompts them to seek shelter under the wings of the careful m o th e r: the clucking male is now
assiduously attentive, and protects both her and her progeny from danger, flirts his white tail, and exhibits
evident signs o f pleasure. These newly-hatched chicks, which a few hours previously were breathlessly
imprisoned within the hard shell, have sprung into life with all the active energies o f their parents, and,
uttering a cheeping note, follow them about, swimming over the glassy pool, scrambling over the floating
reeds in pursuit of insects, with the quickness of thought, and avoiding danger by diving beneath the surface
with remarkable adroitness. From this period a great change takes place; for as the bird increases in size,
feathers take the place of the downy covering, the characteristic colouring being olive-brown above and
hoary white beneath, particularly on the throat and under surface; the bill now becomes of a uniform olive-
green, a colour which it retains for the first y e a r; after this, or in the second year, the adult livery is
assumed, the feathers become more glossy, the bill assumes its brillihnt hues of red and yellow, and the gaily
coloured garter offers a conspicuous contrast to the yellowish green of the leg s ; the eye is now more in
unison with the red of the bill and the frontal plate, and the Moorhens are in their finest attire—both sexes
alike in their colouring, to a shade, even to the red and yellow bill. The average weight o f several individuals
was from 13 to 15 ounces, the lighter birds always being females. What m ore can I say respecting this well-
known denizen of our marshes, the companion of the Will-o’-the-wisp ? perhaps more would be tedious to the
r e ad e r; with a description o f its flight, its food, and its nest and eggs, I shall therefore close the Moorhen’s
history. Its wing-powers are not great, still they are sufficient to transport the bird from one p art o f the
river to another, and for ite nightly sallies, which are made known to all who live on the sides o f rivers by
the peculiar cry it emits while flying overhead, when darkness shrouds the object that gives utterance to it
from our view: this is the voice of the Moorhen. His food consists o f aquatic insects and their larvae,
mollusks of various kinds, every species o f grain, and the shoots o f young wheat o r other cereals. The nest
is sometimes placed on the flat branch o f a tree, at others on stumps near the water’s edge, among reeds, o r on
large floating masses of weeds. It is usually made o f rushes, and is somewhat carelessly constructed. The
eggs, which are from six to eight or nine in number, are of a reddish white, thinly spotted and speckled with
dull orange-brown; they are one inch and eight lines long by one inch three lines broad.
The Plate represents male, female, and brood, about life-size. The plant is the Nymph<sa alba.