COTURNIX COMMUNIS.
Common Quail.
Tetrao cotumix, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 74.
Perdix cotumix, Lath. Ind. Orn., tom. ii. p. 651.
Cotumix communis, Bonn. Ency. M€th. Orn., part i. p. 217.
•-----------dactylisonans, Meyer, Yög. Liev- u. Esthl., p. 197.
----------- vulgaris, Flem. Hist, of Brit. Anim., p. 45.
----------- major, media et minor, Brehm, Yög. Deutsch!., pp. 527, 528, 529, tab. 26. fi». 4.
Ortygion cotumix, Keys, et Bias. Wirbelth. Eur., p. 66.
H isto r ic a l ly speaking the Quail is one o f the very oldest known of migratory birds, and is especially
interesting from more than one point of view. I t fed the Israelites of old, as it now does the epicures of
London and Paris, was better known to Moses than to those who now regard it as a choice luxury for the
table, and its arrival was looked forward to with as much interest in the East nearly 4000 years ago as it is
a t the present moment in Sicily, Italy, and elsewhere. It migrates from south to north in April, and takes
the reverse course in August and September, crossing the Mediterranean and the Black Sea as regularly as
a planet pursues its course.
So much has been written on the history of the Quail and the extent of its range over the globe, that
little o r nothing new remains to be said on the subject. Its range is vast indeed; for it not only inhabits
the whole o f Europe, but the greater part o f India, Russia, and, perhaps, China and Japan.
In Britain it is far less regular in its appearance than on the neighbouring continent, being plentiful in
some seasons and a t others but sparingly dispersed ; thus at one period the corn-fields and stony elevations
almost ring with their “ whit, whit,” while a t others the stillness o f evening is scarcely disturbed by their well-
known notes. O f the three kingdoms, Ireland is the one most frequented by the Quail, the next England,
and lastly Scotland. The bird does not appear to evince a preference for any particular counties, and it is just
as likely that a pair or pairs may be found breeding in Cornwall as in the northern or any o f the intervening
English counties : it is the same in Scotland, for it may just as probably be met with on the Grampians as
in the Lowlands-; and it has been known to breed in the Outer Hebrides. In whatever locality it affects it is
only to be found in summer; if an example be seen at the opposite season the circumstance must be regarded
as an unusual one : not so, however, in Ireland, for there many, whose migratory instinct would seem to be
in abeyance, remain during the winter, unless shot during frosts and sent over with Snipes and Plovers for
sale to the London markets, where I have frequently seen examples a t this period o f the year; and on
inquiring what part o f Ireland they were from have been told Tralee, a portion o f the country spoken of by
Thompson as one in which Quails are most abundant. I f a correct statistic account could be obtained of the
numbers shot in the British Islands, and o f the numbers brought to our markets alive from Egypt, Italy, and
other southern and eastern countries, I imagine we should be truly astonished. Latham stated, nearly forty
years ago, that the Quails came twice a year into the island o f Capri in such vast numbers that the bishop
o f the island drew the chief part o f his revenue from them, and that oiiFthe west coast o f Naples, within
the space Of four or five miles, 100,000 had been taken in a day. Of the bird in a wild State in England,
I have myself taken toll from three bevies in one day, as near to London as the parish o f Langley, and
within sight of the Royal Castle o f W indsor; but the total number was few as compared with the ten or
twelve brace a day killed by Mr. Newcome at South Ferry Fens, in Norfolk, as stated by Mr. Stevenson;
and I have known similar instances o f a like number having been procured by other sportsmen. In the
year 1870, Quails came to this country in unusually large numbers, spreading themselves far and wide
over England and Scotland, affording much sport to the pursuers o f g ame; for the ground which is suited to
the Partridge is equally so to this diminutive but highly nutritive species.
Who better than a clergyman, especially when he is at the same time an excellent ornithologist, ought to
be able to settle the vexed question as to whether the “ selao” o f the Hebrews, with which they were so
miraculously fed in the wilderness, was or was not the Quail ? Surely, then, no apology is necessary for the
insertion of the following extract.from my friend the Rev. H. B. Tristram’s ‘ Natural History o f the
Bible ’
“ Ingenious commentators have spared no pains in the attempt to prove the ‘ selao’ was not a Quail, but
some other creature they imagined more likely to be found in the desert, in spite o f .all etymology, and of
the distinct allusion in the Psalms to feathered fowl, some have suggested locusts, some ffying fish ; others