CICONIA ALBA.
Stork.
Ardea ciconia, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 57.
Ciconia alba, Briss, Orn., tom. v. p. 365, pi. xxxii.
albescens, nivea, et candida, Brehm, Yog. Deutschl., pp. 574, 575.
T h e Stork is one o f the most conspicuous o f migratory birds, and is specially interesting from the circumstance
o f its arrival and departure occurring with a precision which did uot escape the notice o f the inspired
writers; for we read in Jeremiah,viii. 7, “ Yea, the Stork in the heavens knoweth her appointed times.”
T o witness the exactitude with which these movements are effected, my readers must proceed to certain
parts o f the neighbouring continent; for our islands are not in the direct line o f the bird’s migrations;
indeed the Stork has probably never been more than an accidental visitor to u s ; still we have abundant
evidence o f its occurrence in Britain, from the time o f Willughby and Ray to the month in which I am writing
(May 1871), when M r. J . H . Gurney, Ju n ., showed me a fine old male in the flesh, which had been shot either
at Dungeness o r Romney, in Kent. On the Continent, particularly in Germany and Holland, the arrival of
the Stork is regarded as the true harbinger o f spring, and is looked for with the highest interest, as will be
seen from the following passage in the clever work by MM. Erckmann and Chatrian, entitled ‘Contes des
Bords du Rhin,’ to which my attention was directed by Professor Owen. The scene is from the story called
“ L ’ami Fritz,” chap. 8 , page 31.
“ At two o’clock entered Professor Speck, with his great square-toed shoes at the end of his long thin
legs, his long brown coat, and his epicurean nose. He took off his hat with a solemn air, and said, ‘ I
have the honour to announce to the company that the Storks have arrived ! ’ Forthwith was repeated from
every corner o f the beer-house * The Storks have arrived! the Storks'have arrived ! ’
“ A great tumult commenced ; every one quitted his half-finished pint to go and look at the Storks. In
less than a minute there were more than a hundred persons with their noses in the air in front o f the
•‘ Great Hart.’ At the very top of the church a Stork, resting on her stilt-like legs, her black wings folded
above her white tail, her-large red beak inclined with a melancholy air, was the admiration o f aH the »own.
The male Stork whirled around, and tried to settle himself on the wheel, where still hung a few ends
of straw. The Rabbi David had also arrived, and looking up, his old hat hanging a t the back of his
head, exclaimed ‘ They have come from Jerusalem ! They have reposed on the Pyramids o f Egypt . . . ; they
have traversed the s e a s ! ’ All along the street, in front o f the market-house, nothing was seen but old
gossips, old men, and children, their heads thrown back in a sort o f extasy, some old women saying, while
wiping their eyes, ‘ We have seen them again, .once more ! ’ ”
A detailed account o f all the recorded instances of the occurrence of the Stork in England would be
without any compensating amount o f in te res t; I shall therefore merely remark that its visits are by no
toetttts irwuW, that in one year one, two, or more may appear, while in the next, or probably two or three
years, none ¡way W * w s ; the latest instance that has come to my knowledge is the one above mentioned,
in which the bird was <■> «tv inspection by Mr. Gurney.
Now what is the espeeatf m e 40 the :**h«rk in the countries it regularly frequents, which renders it so
great a favourite? The ridding o f the I*»» awl heated marshes o f the reptiles, fishes, and insects
which abound in such situations, cleMtsntg them m i t were and keeping down putridity, ju st as the great
Adjutant and the Kites clear away the offal from the cities of the e a s t ; in performing which useful task
the young of many marsh-birds, Partridges, Larks, &c. fall victims to its voracity; neither do moles,
shrews, or leverets come amiss to it.
Besides being valued for its usefulness, its great m e - rtoMe and attractive bearing, and semidomestic
disposition render it a general favourite with every ««<?. In Holland and Germany it seldom breeds in the
marsh o r the forest, but, more familiar than the Rook, it seeks a closer association with man by resorting to
high chimneys, the gable ends of houses, the !<•••■■ .< •• o f churches, and similar situations, an uplifted cartwheel,
&c., aud thereon constructing its nest and rearing its young—each individual, if no mishap attends
it during its winter sojourn elsewhere, returning m spring to the same site for the like purpose, and being
greeted with a hearty welcome. How different is the reception given to any straggler to our islands !
sooner does it make its appearance than it is immediately pursued and generally shot.
Besides inhabiting Europe, Asia Minor, and Africa, the Stork frequents at one season or other the »