Partridge.
Tetrao perdix, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 74.
Perdix cinerea, Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. ii. p. 645.
vulgaris, Leach; Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 27.
cineracea, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 525.
Stama cinerea, Bonap. Geog. and Comp. List of Birds of Eur. and N. Amer., p. 43.
T h e genus Perdix, as now restricted, comprises but three species—our own well-known bird (P . cinerea),
the one inhabiting the Thibet side o f the Himalayas, named in honour of Mrs. Hodgson P . Hodgsonice, and
a third, from Northern China (P . barbatus). Each of these very distinct species enjoys a wide but different
geographical range over the Old W o rld ; neither of them, however, frequent the boreal regions of the north
nor the torrid ones o f the so u th ; consequently Africa, India, and Southern China are not tenanted by any
member o f this genus. The area over which p ur own Partridge extends may be expressed in a single word—
Europe, out o f which it rarely occurs. Iu England it is very generally dispersed ; in Scotland it is abundant
in the southern districts, hut is rarely met with in the northern, and never, I believe, in the Hebrides; in
Ireland it is dispersed over the cultivated grounds and their vicinity, but has never been so numerous as
with us. Besides specimens from very many parts of the British Islands, my collection contains examples
from Sweden, Russia, and Greece, all of which exhibit a elose resemblance to each other in the colouring
and markings o f their plumage.
The British Partridges differ considerably in size and weight—a circumstance mainly attributable to the
more or less nutritive character o f the food upon which they have been reared; the grass-land birds are
smaller than those from chalky districts, andfe those from rich alluvial and grain-hearing soils the largest
and heaviest. The late Earl of Craven, wheii shooting on the chalk downs o f Ashdown, in Berkshire, was
so good as to weigh a thousand expressly tor my information, and found the heaviest to weigh fifteen
ounces, while the average weight o f the whole was thirteen and a half. The examples which have from
time to time been kindly sent to me by L. H. Cumberbatch, Esq., from the centre of the New Forest in
Hampshire, where they could never have seen com-stubble, were round, compact, little birds, rather dark
in colbur; of these the weight of the heaviest, fully adult males, varied from twelve and a half to thirteen
ounces. A Partridge exceeding a pound in weight is rarely met w ith ; in the whole course o f my shooting
I never killed but one; this was a t Preston Hall, in Ken t; but Mr. W. A. Tyssen Amhurst sent me a
Partridge which had been killed a t Hunmanby, in Yorkshire, that weighed half an ounce over a pound;
and Mr. Elwes favoured me with six heavy birds from Norfolk, one of which weighed the same.
T o enter into any details respecting the nesting o f a bird so common and so well known would seem
superfluous; blit I may mention that some individuals lay earlier than others, and that I possess notes,
among my MSS., of coveys having been seen as early as the 7th of May, while from the 18th to the
25th o f Ju n e is the date a t which the chicks usually burst the shell.
The Duke o f Wellington’s Norfolk keeper, who was with me on the 14th of May, 1862, stated
that he had on the morning o f th at day a Partridge sitting, which he expected would hatch her eggs
before night. But, more remarkable still, Mr. Dilwyn, three days previously, showed me a note from his
keeper in Wales, in which he informed him that he had seen one covey o f Partridges; these, therefore,
must have been hatched a week before, or about the 7th of May. The season certainly was a remarkable
one, much warm weather alternating with eold and wet.
Generally the nest is either placed in the open field or on the sunny side of a bank or hedge-row;
but at this season the Partridge, like the Wood-Pigeon, throws off its usual shyness, and sometimes
confidingly nests in a cottager’s garden or on a bank near it by the roadside, where hundreds of persons
must pass and repass during the period o f incubation. Instances have been known of the deposition
of twelve or fourteen eggs in the flat head of a pollard tree, several feet from the ground, and in other
equally unlikely situations; perhaps one of the most remarkable is described in the following note by
the Rev. Jo h n Hill, which has been kindly transmitted to me by his brother and my estimable friend
Viscount Hill:—“ In Weston churchyard, close to the lodge of Hawkstone Park” (his Lordship’s seat
in Shropshire), “ a Partridge has made her nest, containing thirteen eggs, in some long grass against