Heron.
Ardea cinerea et major, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 236.
et Ardea cristata, Briss. Orn., tom. v. pp. 392, 396, pl. 36.
ig ig S major, cinerea, et cineracea, Brehm, Handb. der Naturg. Vög. Deutsch]., pp. 578, 580.
?• : leucophaa, Gould, Birds of Australia, vol. vi. pl. 55.
W h a t harsh, sharp shriek is that we hear when walking through the beautiful woods o f Cliveden, by the
banks of the Thames ? I t proceeds from a great bird in the air, with rounded wings, contracted neck, and
long legs extended straight out behind, which, with a laboured flight, has come from a distant locality,
perhaps one of the royal parks at Windsor, to fish in our far-famed river. What is that large bird we see
during a railway excursion, flying to and fro from the Kennet and the Lodden to the immediate precincts of
the town of Reading during the months of early spring ? What is the gaunt-looking object, with outstretched
neck, we notice standing motionless in the estuary of the Exe, or wading in the water near Dawlish ? It
is the Heron—the bird so famous in old times for the exciting sport it afforded to the lovers of falconry,
and which formed so conspicuous an item in the feasts o f the nobles on great state occasions—the bird so
well known to the great bard of all time : “ W hen the wind is southerly, I know a hawk from a hern-shaw.”
When these words were penned by Shakspeare, the Heron was more numerous in the B ritish Islands than
it is n ow; but it is still sufficiently plentiful to be regarded as a common bird.
So much has been written respecting the Heron and the heronries of England, that but little remains to
be told by the author of the present work. Macgillivray, Yarrell, Selby, Thompson, and others have each
given voluminous accounts of its habits and manners ; but perhaps I may have had better opportunities of
making myself acquainted with its range over the globe than any o f those writers. I may state, then, that,
besides the British Islands, it is distributed over the whole of Europe, all parts o f India, China, and Japan,
and th at southward of these countries it probably extends throughout the islands o f the Eastern Archipelago
to the most southern parts o f Australia. This austral position may also be assigned to the bird in
the old country of Africa; for it is stated to be there.very generally dispersed, and to be an inhabitant of
the colony o f the Cape o f Good Hope.
In the British Islands the H eron is to be met with a t all seasons. In the autumn and winter months it is
found in the marshes near the sea-coast, on the mud-banks of estuaries, and the borders of rivers, lakes, and
large ponds. Early in the year it seeks the usual woodland places o f nidification, and commences the reparation
of its old nes(s o f sticks among the branches o f trees, or, where there are no trees, in the open marsh;
the latter situation, however, is a vfery unusual one. Like the Rook and the Wood-Pigeon, the Heron
throws off its customary shyness during the breeding-season, and at that period seeks the protection of
man by frequently building close to his mansion, and will even enter the precincts of towns, an instance of
which may be seen, any spring, at Reading in Berkshire. The period when it resorts to such a situation is
so regular, th at its arrival may be looked for almost to a day. The heronry a t Didlington, in Norfolk, Mr.
Tyssen Amhurst informs me, is regularly peopled within a day or two of the middle o f February. There
is then a great clattering o f bills and flapping of wings, with other indisputable evidence o f their having
paired and that the breeding-season is about to commence. Early in the month of March three or four eggs
are laid, and by the«middle o f April the task of incubation has terminated, and the young are hatched. In
their first or downy plumage, the young are most g rotesque in appearance, and by no means beautiful to look
u pon; in a short time the downy covering gives place to feathers, which first appear on the wings and tail,
then on the bodv. By the beginning of June they get out on the branches; and soon after this their pinions
become sufficiently developed to enable them to take short flights, and gain food for themselves. In the
breeding-season, when thé‘ Heron has m ore than usual demands upon his industry, it is somewhat destructive
to the tenants o f the trout-stream, if o ther kinds o f fish are not to be obtained. The mode of their capture
is known to every one who has seen the bird patiently watchingfknee-deep in the stream, with its bill
pointed towards the water ready for the stroke, which is so dexterously dealt th at the aim is seldom
missed. The fish seized, it is tossed into the bird’s capacious g u lle t; and the process is repeated until its
pouch is filled, when it immediately wings its way straight to its nest, where its ravenous young are awaiting
the expected and welcome supply. Capturing small trout, I am sorry to say, is not the only mischief the
Heron indulges i n ; for while standing motionless in the stream, fish of a large size occasionally pass him,
in pursuit, may be, o f their own prey, and are sometimes struck with a well-directed thrust o f its pointed
mandibles ju st behind the head, or precisely in that p art o f the poll in which a weasel seizes a hare. It