THE AMERICAN SPORTSMAN BY ELISHAJ.LEWIS.M.D ;^^ a THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/americansportsOOIewirich THE American Sportsman (,'■ '"(fir^'T BY ELISHA J. LEWIS, M.D. MEMBER OP THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY ; MEMBER OF THE ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA ; AMERICAN EDITOR OF **YOUATT ON THE DOG," ETC., ETC. A NEW EDITION REVISED By ARNOLD BURGES PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED I- PHILADELPHIA ki LONDON J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY 1906 Copyright, 1884, by J. B. Lippincott & Co. PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT. EDITION OF 1885. INGE the publication of the earlier editions of " Lewis's American Sportsman" many important improvements in the art of which it treats have come into general use; and with the view of embodying such of these as may be essential to the sportsman of the present day, this revised and enlarged edition of the work has been prepared and is now offered to the public. As notable among the improvements in this edition, attention is invited to the three new chapters on dogs, one of which is devoted to the " Origin of the Dog," another to the " Science of Breeding," and a third to "Breaking," thus bestowing upon this important subject a proportionate amount of attention. Other topics of in- terest and importance are either now for the first time introduced — as, for instance, the full description of breech-loaders — or else the previous treatment of them is so thoroughly revised as to render the present volume an exceptionally entertaining and reliable manual, both for the practical sportsman and others who may be interested in the literature of field sports. The Publishers. My dear Doctor : — A FEW months only have elapsed since the appearance of the second edition of my book on Sporting ; and the pub- lishers, much to my gratification, notify me that they are once more in need of another supply. To this flattering appeal I most cheerfully assent, and trust that you will again find the volume, on this its third advent, much improved, as a number of illustrations have been added and the text some- what enlarged. With sentiments of the warmest esteem, I am, in ail sincerity, My dear Doctor, Most truly and faithfully yours, ELISHA J. LEWIS. To Pbofessor J. K. Mitchell. ivi360358 PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION K intelligent, observant sportsman, whether he be a votary of the gmtlt craft, or a zealous advocate of the dog and gun, instinctively — ^yes, oftentimes without being in the least conscious of it himself — becomes an impassioned admirer of nature and nature's works in her most varied and attractive forms. It is not, as many narrow-minded astutes ignorantly sup- pose, the mere shugkicr of the timorous partridge which so early calls him forth Id the stubble-field ; neither is it the coveted }^ossession of the savory woodcock that lures him to the entangled brake; nor is it the soaring wisps of fickle snipes which alone entice him to the oozy meadows; nor yet the booming grouse that makes him climb the mountain- side or seek the far-ofif rolliii^ prairie. There are other incentives, other charms, besides these, O ye incredulous, pent-up inhabitants of a crowded city, which impel the sportsman, as with a siren's wand, to hie joyfully away with dog and gun to the fields, to the hills, to the rich autumn-tinted forests. Our sportsman has become an admirer of nature ; he has 10 PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION. learned to appreciate the quiet beauties of a wide-extended landscape as it spreads out majestically before him ; he views with enthusiastic delight the startling grandeur of a mountain- gorge as it suddenly bursts upon his sight; he wanders in silent satisfaction through the murmuring forests of stately oaks, and lingers for a while in pleasant meditation ere he leaps the noisy gurgling streamlet that coquettishly crosses his path. Then, resting for a time from his pursuits, our happy sportsman plucks a half-hidden flower from its heathery bed, listens to the far-resounding echoes of the unerring gun, joins the merry laugh of his boon-companions, or returns the wild halloo of approaching friends. Kow again he slakes his burning thirst with the sparkling waters of a mountain-spring, or laves his manly brow with the crystal drops from the purling rill that so musically babbles at his very feet; and, giving fall freedom to those warmer senti- ments of the heart which too often become choked and stifled by the close contact of selfish city life, he breathes a prayer of gratitude to a beneficent Providence for all these enjoy- ments, for all these pleasurable sensations. To the fields, then, — to the bright and beautiful fields, — to the forests, all clothed in the gorgeous livery of the winter*s frosts, — to the mountains, rich in eternal verdure, — to the limpid streams and gushing rills, — do we once more invite you, to spend those flitting hours of leisure vouchsafed to us all amid the busy scenes of active life. My dear Doctor: — I AM fully conscious of the fact that it does not 3eem well in the present age for an author to appear egotistical, and it therefore becomes him even far less to allude to his own productions in terms of praise or commendation ; but still I may, I trust, in this instance at least, be pardoned for ex- pressing a conviction that you will be much gratified with the new dress that my volume on Sporting has assumed on this its second advent. I beg particularly to call your attention to my Introduction to this second edition, which, in connection with some other matters, explains the motives that impelled me to change the title of my book, and of which I dare hope you will equally approve. In its present improved form and attractive gear, I flatter myself that the "American Sportsman" will give increased satisfaction to my sporting friends, and withal again afford you an hour or so of pleasant relaxation from the more severe studies and weighty responsibilities which your eminent posi- tion in the profession necessarily imposes upon you. With many more kind wishes, and with sentiments of high esteem and great personal regard, I have much pleasure as well as pride in subscribing myself, as ever, My dear doctor, Most truly and faithfully yours, ELISHA J. LEWIS. To Professor J. K. Mitchell. 11 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. E must confess that it was with some degree of surprise, as well as plea- sure, that we learned from our pub- lishers that they were so soon ready to enter into an arrangement with ua for a second edition of our " Hints to Sportsmen," as it was a gratifying assurance, on their part, that the unpretending volume which we had sent forth from the press with many misgivings as to its merits had met with a kind and liberal reception from those for whom we had in our hours of leisure compiled it. It would be affectation in us not to acknowledge that it was with considerable satisfaction we observed from time to time the many flattering reviews and complimentary notices which appeared in the various journals in reference to our work. We sincerely trust that on this, its second advent^ in an entirely new as well as doubly attractive garb, we will meet with the like good treatment from our friends of the press. We can assure all our readers that nothing has been wanting on our part to render the volume still more instructive and interest- ing, both as regards the style of getting-up and the additional matter inserted. . . 13 14 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. There additions, however, though numerous, have been in most instances ingrafted so insidiously on the old text that they can scarcely be discerned, save by those who may have felt their deficiency in the first edition, and will now, we trust, in the present volume, find a portion at least of these defects supplied. In accordance with the repeated suggestions of some of our sporting friends, we have deemed it advisable to change the title of our book from " Hints to Sportsmen" to that of the "American Sportsman." The former appellation, considering the great variety of subjects introduced, and the copiousness with which many of them are treated, seemed rather too restricted in its signi- fication, and far less comprehensive in its general bearing than a work of this character merited. Besides all this, the large additions as well as alterations that we have made in the present volume seemed still further to urge upon us the propriety of this change, and more especially as the work in its entirely new and beautiful dress can scarcely be regarded as the same book, or even recognised as the ofi^spring of the first edition. We cannot refrain from calling the attention of our sporting friends to the wood-cuts of the various game-birds, most of which, in point of execution, have not been equalled, let alone excelled, by any thing of the kind before done in this country. To the Messrs. Louderback and Hoffinann we are indebted for the skill and faithfulness with which they have accom- plished their portion of the work, and we cheerfully acknow- ledge that their great attention to our suggestions, coupled with a becoming ambition on their part to do what would be creditable to themselves, relieved us of much trouble as well as anxiety. Of the truthfulness of these engravings to nature we need say but little, as they speak for themselves, the most of them being really very lifelike both in position and ex- pression. We may remark, however, en passant, that every PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. 15 bird and every fowl was sketched from choice specimens obtained from the Academy of ^N'atural Sciences, or from other equally good sources; and in almost every instance, the drawings were subjected to the approval of our much- esteemed friend, John Cassin, Esq., before the blocks were placed in the hands of the engravers. This latter circumstance alone should of itself be a sufficient guarantee of their correctness, as every one at all conversant with science well knows of Mr. Cassin's rare acquirements in this particular department of Natural History. And we now gladly avail of this opportune occasion to make our public acknowledgments to this gentleman for his many valuable suggestions in reference to the execution of these drawings, the securing of which, by-the-by, has been by far the most difficult — in fact, we may freely say, the only unpleasant as well as vexatious — portion of our task. We also return thanks to Mr. John Krider for his generous aid in supplying us with the skins of several specimens of birds, which assisted materially in insuring correct drawings. This is not the only good service which Mr. Krider has done us as well as the rest of the craft during the last year ; for, independently of the many fine guns that he has turned out from his workshop, he has, with the valuable assistance of his friend, Mr. H. M. Klapp, furnished us with his " Sport- ing Anecdotes," a book replete not only with amusing but very instructive information regarding the habits of our game-birds, sporting-dogs, kc. &c. Mr. George G. White, the principal draughtsman, and, I may say, pupil, of Mr. Cassin's in this particular kind of drawing, has displayed much taste as well as artistic skill in his delineations of the birds ; and we doubt if he has any superior, if equal, on our side of the vasty deep in this spe- cial branch of designing. His chapter-headings and many 16 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. of the vignettes are also spirited and characteristic ; the title- page of the four seasons, and frontispiece, are very pleasing compositions, and give still further evidences of his talent and genius as an artist. With these few comments, we again send our volume forth from the press, trusting, as before, /ar more to the well-known generosity of the craft for its kind reception, than to any great merit of its own, but at the same time bearing in mind the good oJd Latin proverb, that — "Frustra laborat qui omnibus placere Btudet." My dear Doctor: — Although w© have never flushed the covey, started the woodcock, or winged the wild duck, in company, yet I know full well your partiality for the country, as also your early fondness for field and rural sports ; and, if you had not been so early engrossed by professional duties, I doubt not that you would have been the foremost among those who derive 80 much enjoyment and healthful recreation from the dog and gun. Be not surprised, therefore, my dear sir, that, without any previous intimation, I should dedicate this volume to you ; and at the time rest assured that, in so doing, I am not alone influenced by those early feelings of friendship naturally engendered by your many kindnesses to me while a student in your oflice, but I beg rather to present it as a slight token of the high appreciation I entertain of your varied talents and distinguished worth in the profession of which you are so successful a teacher and practitioner. Accept, then, dear sir, this little tribute of esteem from one who has ever regarded the period of his association with you when a pupil as a bright spot in the vista of life, to which he ever refers with peculiar feelings of pleasure ; and, in conclusion, Believe me, my dear doctor. Very faithfully yours, ELISHA J. LEWIS. To Professor J. K. Mitchell. 17 PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. HE lovers of the dog and gun are under many and great obligations to 4 "# Henry William Herbert, Esq., for hia most excellent works on Sporting, which speak for themselves and need no commendation from our pen. They abound in information and research which few have had so great opportu- nities of collecting or so much talent to put together. We also owe much to William T. Porter, Esq., for his valuable and beautiful edition of "Hawker;" and we should not forget to thank J. S. Skinner, Esq.,* for his many contributions to the same branch of literature. The general favor which the pro- ductions of these gentlemen have met with from the public has the more emboldened us to venture forth with this unpre- tending volume, trusting, however, far more to the well-known generosity of "the craft" for its kind reception than to any great merit of its own. We shall not, in a short preface like this, attempt to oft'er, for the consideration of our readers, any thing like an eulo- * Since writing the above, Mr. Skinner has been gathered to his fathers, ripe in years and full of honors. His contributions to the cause of agriculture, rurai sports, and other kindred subjects, were numerous, and insured for him a wide- extended and well-deserved reputation throughout our country 19 20 PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. gium Upon field-sports ; nor shall we endeavor to exhibit to the world the many benefits and advantages to be derived from the general encouragement of these healthful pursuits. We beg merely to remind the student of science, the cunning expounder of Blackstone, the deeply-read follower of Galen, the shrewd devotee of commerce, as well as the most skilful and industrious of artisans, that their intellectual powers demand some remission of their labors, and that their physical energies also need a certain degree of recreation or resuscitation to enable them to pursue those studies and attain those ends which stern necessity or exalted ambition prompts them to undertake. How, then, or where, then, may we ask, can this relaxation of the mind as well as of the body be more agreeably obtained than in the open fields and beautiful forests of our favored country? There, and there alone, far away from the busy throngs of selfish men, wandering with some favored friend, in sweet communion with the green fields, the stately forests, and limpid streams, the mind of the most grave and studious becomes truly unbent and freed from its labors. There the heart beats with renewed vigor, the blood courses through its usually sluggish channels with a quickened pace, and the whole animal as well as intellectual economy becomes sharp- ened and revivified under exciting and healthful influences. Add, then, to this scene the eager sportsman, surrounded by his faithful and sagacious dogs ; call up the sharp echo of the unerring gun ; recollect the plaintive call of the timid partridge, the startling whirr of the affrighted pheasant, tho rapid flight of the lonely woodcock, the devious course of the fickle snipe, or, perchance, the sudden rush of the skulking hare, and the picture is complete. Then tell us whether such scenes as these are not calculated to enliven the mind, expand the energies, and not only bring the glow of health to the cheek of youth, but infuse renewed vigor into the very soul of the infirm and sedentary. PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. 21 la there not a time when the wan-faced student of science may neglect for a while the sickly flickerings of the midnight lamp ? Is there not a time when the learned counsellor may escape the wranglings, the jeerings, the bitter feuds of the halls of justice ? And is there not a moment of leisure, an hour of repose, when the skilful physician may turn a deaf ear to the harassing solicitations of suffering humanity, and draw for a brief period the curtain of oblivion around the couch of disease and death ? Yes ! there is a time for all these : and there is a time when even the anxious, upright, and enterprising merchant may, for a brief period, while quaffing, as it were, the fabled waters of Lethe, forget the perplexities of commerce, the fluctuations of trade, the uncertainty of riches, and remain even unmindful of his gallant ships, that come bounding across the briny deep, heavily freighted with the fine wares of the North, the South, the East, and the West. Yes ! there is a time, thanks to the noble founders of our liberal institutions, when even the industrious artisan, freed from all care and anxiety, may forget the labors and duties of the shop, and wander forth to enjoy the works of nature and learn more highly to appreciate the boon of freedom, his country's dearest gift. To the fields, then, — to the bright and beautiful fields, — with "dog and gun," do we invite you, one and all, to spend those hours of leisure and participate in those innocent enjoyments so captivating to a true sportsman. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Exposition of the Technical Terms used by Ornithologists . 26 CHAPTER II. Sensation in Feathers , . . 29 CHAPTER III. Sporting Terms 32 CHAPTER IV. The Doq {Canis familiaris) . 35 CHAPTER V. The Science of Breeding 60 CHAPTER VI. Breaking 72 CHAPTER VII. Art of Shooting on the Wing 95 CHAPTER VIII. The Partridge {Perdix Virginianus) 114 CHAPTER IX. The Wild Turkey [Meleagris gaUipavo) 172 CHAPTER X. The Ruffed Grouse, or Pheasant ( Tetrao umhellus) ... , . 189 CHAPTER XI. Pinnated Grouse, or Prairie-Hen {Tetrao Cupido) . . . •,. . 202 CHAPTER XII. The "Woodcock (Scolopax minor) . . . ." '" . . . '. 212 CHAPTER XIII. Wilson's, or English Snipe {Scolopax Wilso7iii — Scolopax gallinago) . 240 CHAPTER XIV. Reed-Bird, or Rice Bunting [Emberiza oryzivora) . . . . . 256 23 24 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. Thi Rail, ob Sobjl {Rallus CaroUnua) 268 CHAPTER XVI. Gkxat Rsd-brkastxd Rail {Ratlus elegans) 281 CHAPTER XVII. Clapper-Rail, or Mud-Hen {Rallus crepitans) 288 CHAPTER XVIII. Esquimaux Curlew, or Short-billed Curlew {Scolopax borealis) . 287 CHAPTER XIX. LoNQ-BlLLED CURLEW, OR SiCKLE-BiLL (Numenius longivostris) . 291 CHAPTER XX. Black-BELLIKD Plover {Charadrius apricarius) 294 CHAPTER XXI. SsMiPALMATED Snipe, Willet, OR Stone-Curlew {Scolopax semi- palmata) 299 CHAPTER XXII. Wild-Fowl Shooting 306 CHAPTER XXIII. Cany as-Back {Anas valisineria) 313 CHAPTER XXIV. Different Varieties of Ducks 863 CHAPTER XXV. American Hare, or Gray Rabbit {Lepua aylvaticua) .... 385 CHAPTER XXVI. The Squirrel 396 CHAPTER XXVII. Miscellaneous Hints 408 CHAPTER XXVIII. Discovery and Introduction of Gunpowder 466 CHAPTER XXIX. The Art of Cooking Game 488 CHAPTER XXX. Some Hints on Taxidermy. The Art of Obtaining and Pre- serving the Skins of Birds 614 CHAPTER XXXI. General Hygienic Remarks 623 OHAPTER I. EXPOSITION OF THE TECHNICAL TEEMS USED BY ORNITHOLOGISTS. ITHOUT a cursory knowledge, at least, of the technical terms employed by Orni- thologists in their delineations of the feathered race, we cannot expect all our readers to understand or appreciate the scientific descriptions which we have in- serted of the game-birds of our country; it therefore appears to us that we cannot do better than devote the first few pages of this volume to the full elucidation of these appellatives, which, in fact, are the A B C of Ornithology, the Alpha and Omega of the branch. 25 26 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. This information, so important to the intelligent sportsman, can be easily and quickly acquired by reference to the accom- panying drawing, in connection with the explanations following immediately after. 1, Auriculars, the ear coverts. — The soft feathers that cover the organs of hearing 2, 2. The bastard wing, consisting of three or five feathers, resembling the quills of the true wing; they are placed on a small bone rising from the wrist-joint of the wing. The bastard wing assists in flight by keeping the wing from turning upwards, and contracts the points of the wing in a downward and backward position to that of the course of the bird through the air. 3, 3. The lesser coverts of the wings. — These are the feathers which are found in successive rows upon the wings; those on the inside are termed under coverts, and are much less regarded by ornithologists as a means of distinction than the others. 4, 4. The greater coverts. — The wing feathers lying under the lesser coverts; they are much larger and stronger than the latter. 5, 5. The primaries. — Large quill feathers taking their growth from below the wrist-joint. The length and proportion of the feathers control, in a wide degree, the movements of the bird in the air. The nearer the longer primary quill approaches the body, the more dexterous and beautiful will be the motion of the bird when on the wing. The Hawks, Swallows, and various other birds of rapid flight, that seize their prey in mid air, have the longest primary feather very near the body, and con sequently are enabled to turn and twist themselves with great facility. 6, 6. The secondaries, or second quill feathers, spring from the second bone of the wing. When the wing is extended, they fre- quently appear like a continuation of the primaries. 7, 7. The tertiary, or third quill feathers, also arise from the second bone, but much nearer the elbow-joint. 8, 8. The scapulars, or shoulder feathers, are formed by the soft and downy feathers that cover the shoulder-bones, and are TECHNICAL TERMS. 27 serviceable only as a protection to the parts which they sur- round; they unite without any regularity with the plumage of the back and wings. 9. The rump feathers and upper-tail coverts, — These feathers are the continuation of the covering of the back, and are strong in proportion to the peculiar habits of the bird. In the Wood- pecker tribe, for instance, these feathers are very strong and unusually long, as they make constant use of the tail as a support and aid when climbing the trunks of trees; and so it is with some water-fowl not webfooted, but obliged frequently to take flight from the water. The tail feathers in these last- mentioned birds afford the greatest assistance in springing into the air. 10. The vent feathers and under-tail coverts^ that extend from the anus, or vent, to the tail underneath. These feathers are much longer in some tribes of birds than others. Those that have a constant habit of flirting up their tails — like, for example, the Rallus Carolinus, and several species of small shore-birds — have the vent feathers unusually well developed. The tail feathers are various in size and numbers, and are generally the most ornamental part of a bird. The tail per- forms the most necessary office in the navigation of the bird through the air; in fact, it is the rudder by which its course is determined, and acts in concert with the will of the bird as freely as a ship obeys her helm. 11. Loral space. — The space between the bill and eye. 12. ^ron«.— The forehead. 13. Corona. — Crown of the head. 14. Occiput. — The hind part of the head. 15. Flexure. — Bend of the wing. 16. Tarsi. — Shanks of the legs. 17. Tibia.— T\i\gh. The upper and lower bills are called the superior and inferior maxilla, or upper and lower mandibles. Iris — irides. — The colored circle surrounding the pupil of the eye. 28 LEWIS S AMERICAN SPORTSMAN Mentum. — The chin. Guttur. — The throat. Collum. — The neck. Pectus. — The breast. In measurement, the total length means from point of bill to the end of middle tail feathers. Length of the wingt means from the bend of the wing to the end of the longest quill feather. CHAPTER II. SENSATION IN FEATHERS. HE keenest sense of feeling through the -^-^ medium of the plumage is indispensably necessary to the well-being of all the feathered race. The feathers, it is true, in themselves, like several other portions of the body. such, for example, as the nails, claws, beak, and hoofs, have no real consciousness or actual perception of the sense of touch ; still, they are enabled by the nicest possible organization to convey the most delicate impressions to those functions of the animal economy that do feel If such a wise provision of Nature did not exist, what, we might ask, would become of all the numerous nocturnal birds which seek their food only during the dark hours of night? The whole tribe most indubitably would soon be killed off by striking themselves against the various obstacles that they necessarily encounter in their midnight rambles. This acute sensitiveness on the part of feathers to outward impressions is not, perhaps, as 29 30 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. essential for those birds which fly only in the broad daylight as it is to the numerous variety of owls, bats, &c. that seek their prey solely during the lonely hours of darkness. Nevertheless, a certain degree of this delicacy of perception is absolutely requisite even for them, to secure their safety while per- forming rapid flights through the thickets and forests which they most generally inhabit or take shelter in. This, then, being the case, is it not reasonable to infer that the feathers should at all times be in the highest state of perfection? This physical con- dition, however, could not be preserved if they were not shed or renewed from time to time, as they necessarily would become soiled, dried, broken, and ultimately totally unfit for this nice service by the constant exposure they are subjected to, as well as the many accidents they must, from their mode of life, encounter. To remedy these evils, or rather to make provision for such casualties, Nature, ever provident in all her works, very wisely ordains that the feathered race shall moult, or, in other words, doff their plumage entire, once or twice a year. The simple shedding of the feathers is not the only precaution which a bene- ficent Providence has established for the preservation of these, the most extensive and beautiful portion of his creations. For we may here also notice the remarkable changes that take place in the tints of the plumage, more especially in those birds which remain in the northern latitudes during the long and bleak winters. Many of them, from the most sombre hues of spring and summer, become pied, or even pure white: thus cunningly adapting themselves to the pervading color of the objects by which they are surrounded, they are the better able to conceal themselves from the attacks of their many prowling enemies that are now driven to great extremes for food. The protec- tion afforded birds, as well as many of the smaller quadrupeds, in this alteration of the color of their plumage and pelage, from the aggressions of their more powerful foes, is not the onli/ benefit which results from this wise providence; as the chilling effects of constant exposure to the excessive cold of those hibernal SENSATION IN FEATHEllS. 31 regions are somewhat abated by the transition to white, from the well-established fact that a surface purely white reflects heat far more copiously than a dark one ; and consequently it is not diffi- cult for us to infer that, in like manner, it prevents any undue waste of the animal heat by radiation. The moulting of birds is very gradual, and few of them are ever so bare of feathers as to prevent them from taking wing, and even flying long distances. The time of shedding the feathers varies in the different species and in different climes ; some moult late in the summer, some in the early autumn, and some in the early spring. The summer or autumnal moult is always the most complete; the perennial is generally only a change of color of some portions of the plumage, and not a thorough shedding of the feathers. Those birds, as well as water-fowl, which extend their migrations far to the North, for the purposes of procreation, receive their fresh plumage after the period of incubation has entirely passed by, so that they come out fresh and entirely freed from all the filth and vermin which their previous sedentary occupations may iiave entailed on them. CHAPTER III. SPORTING TERMS. HE technical terms adopted by writers on field-amusements should be perfectly familiar to every sportsman, and ought to be made use of on all occasions when rural diversions are the subject of conversation. Many of our sporting acquaintances are most wofully deficient in a knowledge of these designations, and consequently make the most egregious blunders in their vain efforts to appear au fait in all that pertains to the dog and gun. A few minutes of study and reflection, my patient friends, will make you all proficients in this branch of Orismology ; therefore remain no longer in ignorance, even if it he bliss. TERMS APPLICABLE TO DOGS. A brace of pointers or setters. A couple of spaniels. A leash of " " A couple and a half of spanieU. SPORTING TERMS. 33 1. Toho! 2. Do-vrn charge ! 3. Back or heel ! 4. Steady ! steady there ! 5. Go on ! on ! 6. Hold up : up : 7. Seek dead I find dead bird I 8. Fetch! 9. Drop, sir ! 10. To mouth a bird. 11. To run wild. EXPLANATION OF THE ABOVE TERMS. To make pointers or setters come to a stand. " " lie down while loading. " •* go behind. " " careful when game is about. " " rise — a term of encouragement. " " hold his head up so as to wind the game. " " look for a dead bird. " " bring the dead bird. " " deliver up the dead bird. 10. To bite or chew a bird severely. 11. To run heedlessly, without caution. By a pair is understood two of the same kind or species united or paired by nature, male and femaU. Therefore, how evidently wrong it is to say a paift of pointers, or a pair of setters! By a couple, or brace, is understood the involuntary union of two individual companions of the same species, either by a chain, noose, or tie. PARTRIDOES. A covey of partridges or birds. A brace of " " To spring or flush " " A brood of grouse. A pack of " A brace of " A brace and a half of partridges or birds. OROUSI. A leash of grouse. To raise a " WOODCOCKS. A couple of woodcocks. A flight or fall of woodcocks. A couple and a half of woodcocks. To flush or start a woodcock. SNIPE OR PLOVER. k wisp or walk of snipes. A wing or congregation of plovers. A couple of snipes or plovers. A couple and a half o! snipes oi plovers. To spring a snipe or plover. 3 34 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. SMALL WILD-FOWL, OR SHORE-BIRDS, OF EVERY DESCRIFTIOH. A flock of. A couple and a half of. A couple of. REED-BIRDS AND RAILS. A flock of reed-birds. To get up a rail. A dozen of reed-birds. To mark a rail. Five, ten, fifteen, or twenty rails. A brace of hares. A leash of hares. To start or move a hare. LARGE WILD-FOWL. A flock, team, or badclynge of wild A flock of teal. ducks. A gang of brent. A company or trip of wild ducks. A whiteness of swans. A gaggle or flock of geese. CHAPTER IV. THE DOG — CANIS FAMILIARIS. THEORIES OF ORIGIN. ANY theories upon the origin of the dog have l)een advanced by ancient and modern vvriters, some claiming for him the honor of a distinct race, and supporting this view by the assertion of individual peculiarities, and still more strongly by the assertion that the descendants from crosses between the dog and any of the animals he most nearly resembles, and from which alone he can have sprung, are true hybrids incapable of reproduction vnier S6. If the latter could be sustained, it would prove the dis- tinct character of the dog beyond question, since science accepts the production of hybrid offspring as indubitable evidence of difference 36 36 in the species of the parents, but unfortunately for this claim, investigation has brought to light the fertility of such cross-bred produce. Pennant claimed the dog is only a domesticated jackal crossed with the wolf or fox. Bell, in his work on British quad- rupeds, published in 1837, declared the anatomy and osteology of the dog and wolf are identical, and that they will breed together, and the produce be fertile, and these views are fully sustained by experience with the Indian dogs of the West, as it has been demon- strated beyond doubt, that they breed freely with the coyotes and wolves, and the produce of these unions are as fertile as their parents. Before such showing all theories of distinct race must go down, and modern scientists regard the dog as a mongrel brought up to his present standard by the improving influences of domes- tication. THE DOG IN HIS RELATION TO MAN. No other member of the animal kingdom can compare with the dog in his intimate relations to man. As the protector of his house and flocks ; his companion and assistant in the sports of the field ; his rescuer from death mid Alpine snows or angry waves, and as the watcher and guardian of his dead body, writers, sacred and profane, poets, painters, and sculptors, ancient and modern, all unite in bearing testimony to the faithfulness and devotion of the dog to his master. As he is the inhabitant of nearly every portion of the globe, he enjoys special opportunities for this association, and attaches himself to man in all the difl'erent conditions of life, from the most degraded of the tribes, to the elegance of wealth, and the nobility of the scholar. DIVISIONS INTO BREEDa. Two influences have undoubtedly produced the division of the original stock into the various breeds of the present time. The first and natural influence is that of climate ; the second, the differ ent uses to which man has put the dog. Although the former cannot be ignored, it is to the latter we must ascribe the greatest changes. Certain men by circumstances or taste for certain pur- THE DOG. 37 suits, are specially dependent upon their dogs, and it is easy to see that by long-continued use for peculiar work, characteristics adapted to such work could be produced even in dogs which did not possess them naturally, and when produced, they could be confirmed and strengthened by careful selection in breeding, till classes were formed to which these characteristics become instinctive. By ancient writers dogs were divided into three classes, viz. : FuffnaeeSj Sagaces, and Celeres, but this arrangement has given way to modern ones, more distinctive, though not perhaps more sat- isfactory. Cuvier made three divisions, based upon the shape of the head and the length of the jaws ; these being supposed by him to vary in accordance with the intelligence and scenting power. These classes are, — 1, Matins ; 2, Spaniels ; and, 3, House-dogs. Matins are characterized by " head more or less elongated ; parietal bones insensibly approaching each other ; condyles of the lower jaw placed in a horizontal line with the upper molar teeth." This class is exemplified by, — " 1. Half-reclaimed dogs, hunting in packs; such as the Dingo, the Dhole, the Pariah, etc. " 2. Domesticated dogs, hunting in packs or singly, but using the eye in preference to the nose, such as the Albanian dog. Deer- hound, etc. " 3. Domesticated dogs, which hunt singly and almost entirely by the eye. Example, the Greyhound." Spaniels are characterized by " head moderately elongated ; pari- etal bones do not approach each other above the temples, but diverge and swell out, so as to enlarge the forehead and cavity of the brain." In this class are found, — " 4. Pastoral dogs, or such as are employed for domestic pur- poses. Example, the Shepherd's dog. " 5. Water-dogs, which delight in swimming. Examples, the Newfoundland dog, Water-Spaniel, etc. " 6. Fowlers, or such as have an inclination to chase or point birds by scenting only, and not killing. Examples, the Setter, the Pointer, the Field-Spaniel, etc. as " 7. Hounds, which hunt in packs by scent, and kill their game. Examples, the Foxhound, the Harrier, etc. "8. Crossed breeds for sporting purposes. Example, the Re- triever." House-dogs are characterized by " muzzle more or less shortened ; skull high ; frontal sinuses considerable ; condyle of the lower jaw extending above the line of the upper cheek teeth. Cranium smaller in this group than in the first or second, in consequence of its peculiar formation." This class is made up of, — " 9. Watch'dogSf which have no propensity to hunt ; but are solely employed in the defence of man or his property. Examples, the Mastiff, the Bulldog, the Pug-dog, etc." This classification, though based upon natural laws, presents some anomalies, notably in the case of the greyhound, which will hunt in packs as well as singly, and would use his nose if he was not taught to depend upon sight alone. Also in the dogs showing " inclination to chase and point birds" but which will also chase and point rabbits or hares, unless restrained by education. It is not the province of this work to discuss dogs generally, but to take up only those which are used in sporting. Nor all of these indeed, as many branches of field sports are followed abroad, which are not pursued here. We shall therefore devote our atten- tion to setters, pointers, spaniels, retrievers, and those breeds of hounds in common use, taking for our standard the English types, as they are universally conceded to be better than those native to this country, owing to the greater attention which has been given to their breeding and development. THE POINTING INSTINCTT. What is called the "pointing instinct," common to the setter and pointer, is probably an acquired faculty, resulting from the use and consequent education which we have spoken of as instru- mental in the formation of breeds. Certain writers have accounted for it upon the theory that wild animals steal up to their prey and crouch to gather energy for a spring, and man, finding this crouch promised to be useful in certain kinds of work, developed it by education in certain breeds till it became characteristic of them, while others lost it by disuse. This view we think wrong. The crouch alluded to is characteristic of the feline tribe, but not of the canine. The domestic cat exhibits it as strongly as the tiger. All wild members of the cat tribe habitually seize their prey in this manner; but wild dogs, though they approach their quarry with caution, generally seize it by rushing upon it, and springing, if at all, from the running position. That the point is not a developed natural crouch, but the result of special education, is also indicated by the original differences in the pointing position of the setter and pointer, the former dropping to his game, and the latter standing erect. As no natural reason appears for the crouch being changed to the stand in the pointer, it seems reasonable that the pause in both positions was taught and not instinctive, and that the difference was due to the different uses the dogs were originally put to. As we shall show presently, the setter is the descendant of the spaniel, a dog originally used by sportsmen to assist in net- ting birds before the art of shooting was introduced. The dog was used to discover the whereabouts of birds by his scenting powers, but if he pushed on he would flush them, and so destroy the sportsman's chances for capture, and to prevent this he was taught to crouch, and remain in that position while the net was drawn over him. If he stood erect, such drawing would be diffi- cult, if not impossible, hence the advantage of the drop or crouch. So far as we have any means of knowing, the pointer was never used for this kind of work. It appears probable he was not used as a bird-dog till a much later period, when the introduction of guns made the sportsman independent of the net, by enabling him to kill his game from a distance, and consequently all that was necessary was that the dog should pause long enough to enable the gun to come up, before the game was started. The position in which the pause was made was, however, no longer material, and, being unrestrained, the dog naturally remained erect, and pointed rather than set his birds. The results of this difference in edu- iO LEWISES AMERICAK SPOHTSMAK. cation are still observable, since, though setters generally have adopted the erect " point'' in place of the " set," many individuals still drop to their game, while pointers very seldom do so, and then only under peculiar circumstances, such as when going at great speed they catch the scent, and drop because they cannot in any other way arrest their advance. Drake, one of the most noted pointers of modern times, habitually dropped, but Drake was one of the fastest dogs that ever ran in English field trials, and it was conceded it was impossible for him to come to a point in a standing position. It is claimed that some of his offspring exhibit his peculiarity, even though not as fast as he was, but this can be more naturally accounted for as the transmission of an individual peculi- arity than as a reversion to original instincts, because Drake's an- cestors did not drop, nor, as we have said, do pointers generally. The theory of revei-sion would not therefore be tenable, because it would claim a throw back to something which has never been characteristic of the breed. It is easy to account for the change in position in setters upon the ground that they have been encouraged to assume the more elegant erect " point," but the frequency of exhibition of the original "set" shows that the habit resulting from original education is still latent, though weakened by later influences. A further argument supporting the view that the set was taught and not instinctive, is found in the fact that, even in the days when spaniels were used in the manner we have described, only a portion of them exhibited this faculty. There was a class known as " Setting Spaniels," yet the earliest pictures of spaniels show no marked differences or apparent variations in characteristics in the individuals represented, so that we are forced to suppose all pictures are those of the same class, or, what is more probable, that there were no decided class distinctions in the land-spaniels, and all belonged to the same division, and possessed the same natural attributes. That some should be taught to set and others not, is easily accounted for by the limited demand for setting dogs, and when the demand increased, it would certainly be more natural lo supply it by breed- THE DOG. 41 ing from those already educated, than by educating others ah initio. Thus, in time, a breed could be formed in which the acquired "set" would be firmly fixed, and exhibited as naturally as any other characteristic, and from this our present-day setters could be evolved, with no greater change than marks the improvement of other breeds from the original types. That portion of the original class which was not educated, would transmit only the character- istics originally possessed by all. All spaniels have delighted in the pursuit of game from time immemorial. This is purely in- stinctive, and thus we have to-day in our setters and spaniels the same common love for hunting, with just such difference in action upon game as marks descent from the educated or uneducated portion of the original stock. THE SETTER. By all recognized authorities the setter is regarded as the de- scendant of the land-spaniel. In the ancestral line he has existed in England for over four centuries, and is pronounced by Stone- henge to be the most national of all dogs found there. At what period he first became a setter is not known, but in Daniel's " Rural Sports" there appears a copy of a bond given by John Harris, October 7, 1485, in which he covenants "to keep and break a certain spaniel to set partridges and other game, for ten shillings of lawful English money." Stonehenge says, " A Duke of Northumberland trained one to set birds in 1 555, and shortly after the setter was produced." Writing of the " Setting Spaniel," Richard Surflet, who wrote in the year 1600, said, "There is another sort of land-span ny els which are called setters, and they differ nothing from the former but in instruction and obedience, for these must neither hunte, range, nor retaine, more or less, than as the master appointeth, taking the whole. limit of whatsoever they do from the eie or hand of their instructor. They must never quest at any time, what occasion soever shall happen, but as being dogs without voices, so they must hunt close and mute. And when they come upon the haunt of that they hunt, they shall 42 LEWISES AMEllICAi^ SPORTSMAK. sodainly stop and fall down upon their bellies, and so leasurely creep by degrees to the game till they come within two or three yardes thereof, or so neare that they cannot press nearer without danger of retrieving. Then shall your setter stickj and by no persuasion go further till yourself come in and use your pleasure." From this setting spaniel the setter of to-day has been evolved. Whether crosses were resorted to to perfect the dog, or whether he was simply brought up by careful selection in breeding, is an open question, some writers holding one and others the other theory. The probability is, though experimental crosses were tried in some instances, the main line of the setter family is as nearly pure, in the sense of uncrossed, as any family of dogs we have. Certainly, even the present setter retains the marks of his origin in what would seem an unusual degree in a dog subjected to violent crosses, and the changes which have been made, could result as well from selection and effort to breed out undesirable qualities and perpetuate those which are desirable, as from crossing. THE POINTER. The pointer was not introduced into England till many years after the setter had come into general use. He was imported from Spain in his pointer form, but is considered by authorities as the descendant of some of the hounds, though how bred no one can say. The Spanish pointer had his merits, and also his radical defects, and to correct the latter foxhound and greyhound crosses were introduced, so that the modern pointer is not only essentially a cross-bred dog, but also materially changed in form and attributes from even his near ancestors. THE SPANIEL. As the progenitor of the setter this dog would seem entitled to earlier mention, but we have given the various breeds in the order of their comparative relation to present field sports, and the spaniel cannot therefore take precedence of the setter and pointer. Of his origin even the earliest writers give no reliable information, tttfi DOG. 4S and we must simply accept him as the oldest representative of the dogs used in the pursuit of birds, without indulging in profitless speculations of his ancestry. Many varieties of the spaniel are now in existence. Originally all were field-dogs, but fashion has of late years drawn a dividing- line, and the smaller breeds are assigned to the non-sporting class Practically this is no loss, as sufficient are left to meet all demands for work, and the surplus may be utilized as pets, and bred down to a size and delicacy suitable for this purpose, without injury to the interests of sportsmanship. THE HOUND. What in common parlance are known as hounds, are also found in great varieties; but sporting law has invaded the ancient di- vision and struck out of it some of its members. It may seem strange to the uninitiated that the greyhound is no longer regarded as a hound proper, and that the deerhound is classed among the retrievers, but the modern limitation of hounds includes only those which hunt and kill their game by scent alone, and as the grey hound hunts by sight, and the deerhound is used only to follow the wounded quarry and bring it to bay, these dogs by the pecu- liarity of their employments are excluded from the hound class. The hounds which conform to the present limitation are the blood- hound, the foxhound, the harrier, the beagle, and the otter-hound, and of those in this class which are used in this country we shall speak at the proper time. THE KETRIEVER. This term applies only to dogs bred and kept exclusively for re- trieving game, and does not properly include dogs which are taught to perform this duty in connection with their other field work. In England field-dogs are not as a rule allowed to retrieve, but in this country it is the custom of sportsmen to break their setters, pointers, and spaniels to retrieve, and so save the loss of much game or the employment of special retrievers. In England the 44 LEWISES AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. water-spaniel is not included in the retriever class, but here he is a very useful dog for men who delight in duck-shooting, and do not wish to wear out their field-dogs by exposing them in water work. In a later portion of this chapter we shall speak of the water-spaniel, and indeed might dispense with all mention of the retriever proper but for the fact that efforts have been made to popularize the dog here, and occasional specimens are met with, also that we have on the Chesapeake, a true retriever of high char- acter which we shall refer to, and it certainly seems inappropriate therefore to pass the class over in silence. Without going into particulars, it is sufficient to say English retrievers and the Chesa- peake dog are cross-bred, being made up in the former instance of combinations of blood, which experience has shown are specially adapted to the production of the desired qualities, and in the latter by a cross of the English water-dog and the Newfoundland. SETTER DIVISIONS. The setter family is divided into three great national classes ac- cording to origin, viz. : the English, Irish, and Gordon, or black- and-tan, the latter being of Scotch descent. All are largely repre- sented in this country, and each breed has its special admirers. The first is, however, the most generally popular, and is in fact entitled to pride of place as first in the list of American field-dogs. THE ENGLISH SETTER. In describing this and other dogs we shall give the points ol form as laid down by Stonehenge, they being accepted as the stand- ard in judging at shows. " The shuU (value 10) has a character peculiar to itself, somewhat between that of the pointer and cocker-spaniel, not so heavy as the former's and larger than the latter's. It is without the prominence of the occipital bone so remarkable in the pointer, is also narrower between the ears, and there is a decided brow over the eyes. " The nose (value 5) should be long and wide without any ful- ness under the eyes. There should be in the average dog setter at THE DOG. 46 least four inches from the inner corner of the eye to the end of the nose. Between the point and the root of the nose there should be a slight depression ; at all events there should be no fulness, and the eyebrows should rise sharply from it. The nostrils must be wide apart and large in the openings, and the end should be moist and cool, though many a dog with exceptionally good scenting powers, has had a remarkably dry nose, amounting in some cases to roughness like that of shagreen. In all setters the end of the nose should be black or dark liver-colored, but in the very best whites, or lemon and whites, pink is often met with, and may in them be pardoned. The jaws should be exactly even in length, a * snipe nose' or * pig jaw,' as the receding lower one is called, being greatly against its possessor. " EarSy lipSf and eyes (value 4). With regard to ears, they should be shorter than those of the pointer and rounded, but not so much as those of the spaniel. The * leather' should be thin and soft, carried closely to the cheeks, so as not to show the inside, without the slightest tendency to prick the ear, which should be clothed with silky hair little more than two inches in length. The lips also are not so full and pendulous as those of the pointer, but at their angles there should be a slight fulness, not reaching quite to the extent of hanging. The eyes must be full of animation and of medium size, the best color being a rich brown, and they should be set with their angles straight across. " The neck (value 6) has not the full rounded muscularity of the pointer, being considerably thinner, but still slightly arched, and set into the head without that prominence of the occipital bone which is so remarkable in that dog. It must not be ^throaty,' though the skin is loose. " The shoulders and chest (value 15) should display great liberty in all directions, with sloping deep shoulder-blades and elbows well letdown. The chest should be deep rather than wide, the ribs should be well sprung behind the shoulder, and great depth of the back ribs should be especially demanded. ^* Back quarters and stifles (value 15). An arched loin is de^ 46 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. sirable, but not to the extent of being ' roached' or ' wheel-backed/ a defect which generally tends to a slow up-and-down gallop. Stifles well bent and set wide apart, to allow the hind legs to be brought forward with liberty in the gallop. " LegSf elbows J and hocks (value 12). The elbows and toes which generally go together should be set straight, and if not, the ' pigeon toe' or inturned leg is less objectionable than the out turn, in which the elbow is confined by its close attachment to the ribs. The arm should be muscular and its bone fully developed, with strong and broad knees, short pasterns, of which the size in point of bone should be as great as possible (a very important point), and their slope not exceeding a very slight deviation from the straight line. Many good judges insist upon a perfectly upright pastern, like that of the foxhound ; but it must not be forgotten that the setter has to stop himself suddenly when at full stretch he catches scent, and to do this with an upright and rigid pastern causes a considerable strain on the ligaments, soon ending in * knuckling over ;' hence a very slight bend is to be preferred. The hind legs should be muscular, with plenty of bone, clean strong hocks, and hairy feet. "The/e6^ (value 8) should be carefully examined, as upon their capability of standing wear and tear depends the utility of the dog. A great difference of opinion exists as to the comparative merits of the cat- and hare-foot for standing work. Foxhound masters in- variably select that of the cat, and as they have better opportunities than any other class of instituting the necessary comparison, their selection may be accepted as final. But as setters are specially required to stand wet weather, it is imperatively necessary that there should be a good growth of hair between the toes, and on this account a hare-foot, well clothed with hair, as it generally is, must be preferred to a cat-foot naked, as is often the case, except on the upper surface. " The jlag (value 5) is in appearance very characteristic of the breed, although it sometimes happens that one or two puppies in a well-bred litter exhibit a curl or other malformation, usually consid- ered to be indicative of a stain. It is often compared to a scimitar, THE DOG. 47 but it resembles it only in respect of its narrowness, the amount ot curl in the blade of this Turkish weapon being far too great to make it the model of the setter's flag. Again, it has been com- pared to a comb, but as combs are usually straight, here again the simile fails, as the setter's flag should have a gentle sweep ; and the nearest resemblance to any familiar form is to the scythe with the cui've reversed. The feather must be composed of straight silky hairs, and beyond the root the less short hair on the flag the better, especially towards the point, of which the bone should be fine and the feather tapering with it. " Symmetry and quality (value 5). In character the setter should display a great amount of ' quality,' a term which is difficult of explanation, though fully appreciated by all experienced sportsmen. It means a combination of symmetry, as understood by the artist, with the peculiar attributes of the breed under examination, as interpreted by the sportsman. Thus a setter possessed of such a frame and outline as to charm the artist, would be considered by the sportsman defective in Equality' if he possessed a curly or harsh coat, or if he had a heavy head with pendent bloodhound- like jowl and throaty neck. The general outline is very elegant, and more taking to the eye of the artist than that of the pointer. " The texture and feather of coat (value 5) are much regarded among setter breeders, a soft silky hair without curl being con- sidered a sine qua non. The feather should be considerable, and should fringe the hind as well as fore legs. " The color of coat (value 5) is not much insisted on among English setters, a great variety being admitted. These are now generally classed as follows in the order given : 1, Black and white ticked, with large splashes, or more or less marked with black, known as blue Belton ; 2, orange and white freckled, known as orange Belton ; 3, plain orange or lemon and white ; 4, liver and white ; 5, black and white with slight tan markings ; 6, black and white; 7, liver and white; 8, pure white; 9, black; 10, liver; 11, red or yellow." We would call attention to a repetition in numbers 4 and 7, 48 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. which is evidently a mistake in the first instance, as liver and white ranks below black, white, and tan, and black and white, with setter breeders. THE IRISH SETTER. This dog differs from the English setter as follows ; the value of points being the same in both cases : "The skull is somewhat longer and narrower, the eyebrows being well raised, and the occipital prominence as marked as in the pointer. "The ftose is a trifle longer, with good width, and square at the end ; nostrils wide and open, with the nose itself of a deep mahogany or very dark fleshy color, not pink or black. " JEh/es, ears, and lips. The eyes should be a rich brown or mahogany color, well set, and full of intelligence ; a pale or goose- berry eye is to be avoided. £ars long enough to reach within half an inch or an inch of the end of the nose, and though more tapering than in the English dog, never coming to a point ; they should be set low and close, but well back, and not approaching to the hound's in setting and leather. Whiskers red ; lips deep, but not pendulous. " In frame, the Irish dog is higher on the leg than either the English or black-and-tan, but his elbows are well let down never- theless; his shoulders are long and sloping; brisket deep, but never wide ; and his back ribs are somewhat shorter than those of his English brethren ; loin good, slightly arched, and well coupled to his hips, but not very wide ; quarters slightly sloping, and flag set on rather low, but straight, fine in bone, and beautifully carried. Breeders are, however, going for straight backs like that of Palmerston, with flags set on as high as in the English setter. ^^ Legs very straight, with good hocks, well-bent stifles, and muscular but not heavy haunches. " The/ORTSMAN. can hardly distinguish them from the living fowl, as thej ride gently on the surface and appear to be employed in feeding, owing to the constant motion of their heads and body imparted to them by the quiet rippling of the water. The construction of this skiff is such that when anchored out, loaded with the shooter, his ammunition, and the necessary ballast, the water is on a level with the deck of the box ; and when re- clining, the occupant and all his paraphernalia are entirely con- cealed from observation, insomuch that it is next to impossible to distinguish any portion of this curious ambush, even when within a few hundred feet of it. We have often been amazed when gazing on the water in the direction of the flats, to see a black figure rise up suddenly, as if from the deep, and blaze forth a destructive volley into a flock of ducks about to alight, and then immediately sink again from view. The shooter, having delivered his well- directed fire, quickly reloads his gun or guns, and throwing himself again on his back, awaits another opportunity to repeat the sport, which almost immediately follows, provided the day be favorable for the flying of wild fowl. It is better, in fact usual, to have two or more double-barrelled guns in the sink, as a great many ducks are only winged at the first discharge, and need re- shooting to secure them. Thus, in rapid succession, immense numbers of canvas-backs, as well as other wild fowl, are killed, and the water for a hundred feet or more is crimsoned with the rich blood and covered with the mangled bodies of this far-famed duck. Those engaged in this profitable way of killing canvas-backs are always accompanied by a companion in a light sail or row boat, who keeps at a respectful distance, for the purpose of watching over the safety of his associate as well as running down upon the adjacent feeding-grounds and putting the ducks to flight, so that they may chance to join the decoys that are set to allure them as they pass up and down the feeding-shoals. On the flats in the coves near to Havre de Grace and Spesutia Island, where this method of shooting ducks has been more particularly practised during the last three seasons, there is CANVAS-BACK. 33l but little or no current during calm weather, and therefore is singularly suitable for this kind of sport. The ducks, after being shot, will remain nearly in the same place where they dropped for a considerable time without drifting away ; the shooter, therefore, pays no heed to them until he has a large number killed, when he makes a signal to his companion to come and pick them up. Th3 amount of ducks killed in this way during the four past seasons is enormous, — almost beyond belief. We are credibly informed that Mr. W. W. Levy, a ducker well known on the Chesapeake Bay for his skill in this particular sport, has killed as many as one hundred and eighty-seven ducks in one day, and during the seasons of 1846 and 1847 actually bagged seven thousand canvas-backs. This system of killing ducks, we believe, was introduced on the Chesapeake Bay by some of the experienced wild-fowl shooters from the vicinity of New York, and who now reap a rich harvest from their hardihood and ingenuity. It is no unusual thing for one of these men to kill as many as fifty couples of canvas-backs in the course of a day; and if the weather prove favorable for this kind of shooting, they have been known to fill a small vessel with ducks in two or three days, which they immediately despatch for the markets of New York, Baltimore, or Philadelphia. These worthies that pursue wild fowl for a living usually make their appearance on the Chesapeake Bay in small yachts, or rather ill- looking sloops, in which they live and stow away their plunder, seldom or never visiting the neighboring shores, knowing full well the reception they most likely would meet with from the hands of those residents who also kill ducks during the winter season to sell, and consequently, from selfish motives alone, are very testy and jealous of those rights which the legislature has endeavored to guarantee to them, but which they from a lack of principle and moral energy are incompetent to enforce by legal measures. When the wind is blowing pretty fresh and the ripple high, the ducks are more apt to notice the decoys than on perfectly mild days, and are also more likely to alight among them. When ducks 332 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. are approaching the battery, the distance at which they are from it is often very delusive, insomuch that the inexperienced sports- man will find himself continually rising up to shoot before the fowl have got over the decoys, and even long before they have come within fair shooting range. This act of "rising up" too soon on the part of the shooter is a common fault with the beginner, and is fatal to his success in most instances; as the ducks, immediately on his appearance, take the alarm, and, making a sudden turn, sheer off in time to save themselves. Ducks should be shot after they have alighted, or just when dropping their legs in the act of settling on the water, and not a moment sooner. DESCRIPTION OP THE MODEL, WITH PARTICULAR DIRECTIONS FOR BUILDING A SINK, OR BATTERY. A, A. The box in which the shooter lies concealed. B. A rim of sheet-lead extending entirely around the box, to prevent the ripple from washing in upon the shooter. c, c, c. Another rim of sheet-lead, as a still further protection from the ripple. D, D, D, D. The platform, or false deck surrounding the box, sapported by carlings. £, E, E, E, E, E, E, E, E. Musliu sheeting, or canvas, stretched over the wooden frames running around the platform. CANVAS-BACK. 333 ». A board or frame attached to g by leather hinges. G. Another board or frame, secured to the deck by strong iron hinges. H, H, H, H, H, H, H, H. Leather hinges, securing the frames (on which the canvas is tacked) to the platform or deck. I, I. Wrought-iron hinges, constructed with arms, so as to allow the end- wing to fold over the side-wings, which are first drawn in upon the deck when the battery is to be removed from its position. K, K, K, K. Ropes extending from the extremities of the frames, and to which the canvas is also attached: this arrangement permits the wings to be folded more readily upon the deck. L, L. Points at which a rope is passed through the cartings supporting the deck, to the middle or bight of which rope the cable of the head-anchor is attached. M. Point at which the foot-anohor is attached to the carting supporting the deck. Having given, we trust, a satisfactory explanation of the model, we will now proceed to give some special instructions as to the building of the battery. The timber most usually employed is one-inch white pine, except in the case of the head and foot of the box, which should be made of two-inch oak, or some other hard and durable wood. The side-boards and bottom of the box are attached to the head and foot; and the strength of the box, as well as the deck, is in a great measure dependent upon these oaken timbers. The carlinga, or small beams which support the platform or deck, are also made of oak, one and a half inch thick, five inches wide in centre, reduced at their extremities to one and a half inch, and secured to the ends and sides of the box by means of screw-boltB or large wrought nails. The length, width, and depth of the box must of course be proportioned to the size of the shooter; for an ordinary-sized individual, the following dimensions are amply sufficient : — FEIT. INCHES. Length of box 6 3 Depth " 1 IJ Width " at top 2 Width " at bottom 1 8 liength of platform or deck 12 Width " " 7 Width or height of rims of sheet-lead 4 334 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. FEKT. INCHia, Width of the frames to which the canvas is tacked 2 1 Width of boards f and g, each 8 Width of canvas wing at the head 9 The deck is not a perfect plane, but declines, or rather is graded off, from the box on every side to the extent say of one inch. This slope or dip of the deck permits the ripple to wash or play over the platform the more securely, having a constant tendency to the edges instead of the centre, where the box is placed, — the opposite of which would be the case if the deck was a dead level. The entire edge of the box is slightly elevated above the surface of the deck, — say an eighth to a quarter of an inch ; to this edge the inner rim of sheet-lead is tacked, extending entirely around the box, and, being very pliable, is raised up at an angle of forty- five degrees just before launching the battery into its position on the shooting-grounds, which precaution will prevent the ripple from washing into the box. The outer rim of sheet-lead c, c, c, it will be observed, does not extend entirely around the deck, that being totally unnecessary, from the circumstance of the sea or ripple seldom or never being sufficiently violent to break over the foot or sides so as to endanger the comfort of the shooter ; and when such should be the case it is time for the ducker to decamp for more secure quarters. The head of the battery, it will be seen, has two eight-inch boards. The inner one G, as explained above, is attached to the deck by stout iron hinges i, i, made with projecting arms, so that the whole head-wing may turn in upon the two side-wings, which are first folded up when the box is about being removed from its position. The other frame F is secured to G by strong leather hinges, as well as the balance of the frame to which the canvas is tacked. The head of the battery is always anchored to the breeze, and, as a matter of course, is obliged to sustain the principal shock from the wind and waves, and of necessity is made differently as well as much stronger than the foot, by the addition of the frame- CANVAS-BACK. 336 work F and G, and which, from their peculiar construction and attachment to the solid platform, oppose a pliable but at the same time safe resistance to the shock of the waves. It is most important to know exactly how to attach the anchors to the battery, more particularly the one at the head; for without proper precaution on this point the whole machine would ride most unpleasantly to the shooter at the slightest puff of Old Boreas. To explain this more fully, we have caused two points or dots — L, L — to be placed on the model at the head of the box, to show the position of the ends of the rope to which the anchor is attached, and have defined above the manner in which the cable of the anchor is to be secured to the hight of this rope. The advantages of this arrangement should at once be obvious to the greenest landsman ; for the head of the platform, being in a measure free from restraint, is permitted to rise and fall with the swell of the sea, with an easy motion, thus protecting the shooter from the disagreeable consequences of the waves breaking in over the deck, which would be the inevitable result if the anchor was attached to the extreme end of the platform ; as the head of the battery, during a heavy blow, would be pulled entirely under water, and the whole machine, even during a comparative calm, would be subjected to a jerking, disagreeable motion. The position of the foot-anchor we have designated by the pomt M, and requires no further explanation. At the bottom of the box there is a false bottom, or drainage- board, which takes up an inch and a half of the original depth. Notwithstanding this additional loss of space, there is still sufficient room remaining of the thirteen and a half inches not only to ac- commodate, but absolutely to hide below the surface of the plat- form, the shooter himself, as well as the sheepskin or buffalo-robe upon which he reposes. As to the amount of ballast necessary for a battery such as we nave described, that must be regulated by the state of the wind and waves, and other circumstances; it will vary, however, from 336 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. fifty to one hundred and fifty pounds, increasing from the lesser to the greater amount in proportion to the violence of the elements. Portions of iron pigs are most convenient for ballast. When these batteries are intended to be occasionally towed out to their position on the flats, they should be made sharp at the stern or bow by the addition of a false cut- water ; otherwise it will require heavy pulling to get them along. Most, if not all, of those in the hands of the regular bay shooters are made square at the ends, and, thus constituted, answer their purposes perfectly well, for they move them from point to point only by hauling them on board of their large row or sail boats, which convey the \vhole party on these expeditions. On looking at the drawing, several decoy-ducks will be noticed on the platform. The bodies of these ducks are reduced in bulk, or, in other words, are shaved down to one-third of their original thick- ness, and permanently fixed to the deck at suitable intervals, with movable heads, which are slipped on and off at pleasure by the ducker, as he takes his position in the box or retreats from it. The number of decoys set out around the battery is not often less than two hundred, and most generally two hundred and fifty, or even more. Each decoy has a string several feet long attached to it from a loop in the breast, and to the end of each string is tied a small piece of leaden pipe or other convenient metal, or even a fragment of stone sufl&ciently heavy to anchor the decoy and pre- vent its floating off" from its position. The arranging or putting out of so great a number of decoys around the battery, on a cool, blustering December morning, is no child's play, we can assure the uninitiated reader, and is only equalled, or rather excelled, in point of discomfiture, by the pro- cess of taking them up again in the evening, when it is necessary to wind the wet and half-frozen strings around each one to prevent entanglement when placed together in the boat.* * Decoys made of solid blocks, such as are universally used, can be had of duckers on the bay, if ordered during the idle season, at a moderate price, ranginf from twenty to thirty dollars a hundred CANVAS-BACK. ^ 337 A small pad or pillow for the head to lie on should be placed at the top of the box, and in severe weather the shooter will find a woollen helmet, vizor, or mask, a very comfortable contrivance to protect him from the cold blasts. We were formerly under the impression that much danger was to be apprehended from the accidental sinking of these batteries ; but we are now satisfied, from further observation and the expe- rience of old duckers who have used these machines properly con- structed, (for the early ones were susceptible of much improvement,) that our fears are rather gratuitous. Mr. W. W. Levy, of Havre de Grace, to whom we are indebted for a rough but very complete drawing of a battery from which the above sketch was taken, as well as much other valuable in- formation upon this subject, assures us that a box built such as we have described could not, by actual experiment, be made to sink below the surface, when filled with water, loaded with two hundred and fifty pounds of pig iron and the addition of two stout men. This experiment we cannot but consider a very extreme one, and the result most conclusive ; and we shall no longer hesitate in recommending our sporting friends to consign themselves, without hesitation or fear, to one of these cunning machines whenever a fitting opportunity presents itself. The ease with which one of these batteries rides on the surface of the bay, even during a heavy blow, is very remarkable ; we have been quite comfortable in them, when it required two strong oarsmen to row a light gunning skifi". 338 LEWIS'S AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. AMBUSH ON THE FLATS. We noticed last season a very simple but at the same time rather ingenious contrivance erected on the flats in Elk River, from which to shoot ducks. We have never seen any thing of the kind before, but presume something similar may have been adopted elsewhere by others. This ambush or blind, as all such contrivances are termed m this particular section, was constructed in this wise : — Some shooters, taking advantage of low tide, had driven intc the soft mud, in the very centre of the widest expanse of feeding ground, and in the very path of the ducks as they flew up and down the river, four strong posts, forming a square. These posts or piles were perforated on their upper portion, which extended far above low-water mark, with large holes of sufficient capacity to permit the introduction of long hickory pins, which passed entirely through and projected several inches from the inside. Upon these pins thus secured was placed a light frame, sufficiently strong, however, to bear the weight of the shooter, who lay there completely concealed from observation by a profusion of cedar brush and eel-grass piled around him. The numerous holes in the posts were necessary for the purpose of raising up and letting down the framework to suit the state of the tide, which was very easily accomplished before the sports- man took his position. This particular kind of blind was especially adapted for this river, as the narrow steamboat-channel is marked out in its whole course by long poles thrust into the mud on either border, each one of which was surmounted by a heavy piece of cedar-brush, with which the ducks soon become familiar while feeding, and therefore take no precaution to avoid while flying, which also was the case with the blind; and most excellent shooting at times was thus obtained from this cunningly-devised ambuscade. The flats or feeding-grounds on Elk River are quite extensive, and occasionally attract enormous hosts of wild fowl, more espe- CANVAS-BACK. 339 cially when they have been greatly harassed by the boats and batteries on the Susquehanna and Chesapeake, as both these modes of warfare are strictly interdicted upon this stream. During the season of 1850, we had considerable sport shooting over decoys off the points on Elk River, the weather being mild, and the ducks, both canvas-backs and red-heads, being more numerous than we had ever before witnessed them on this water. STOOLING OFF POINTS. Another method of killing ducks by means of decoys is to anchor them off a short distance from some one of the many points along the bay or river-shores, more particularly on those points in the narrows of Spesutia Island. When the canvas-backs are flying and the weather is not too severe, this plan affords most excellent sport, and great numbers may be killed. This kind of shooting requires the assistance of a dog ; and none but a Newfoundland or other hardy water-spaniel of some good breed will be able to stand the work, if the weather is very cold; as the frequent plunging into the water chills and stiffens the animal to such an extent that he is often barely able to walk or swim.* When the weather is very calm and the surface of the river remains unruffled by a breeze, although the ducks may be flying, they will not dart to decoys, more especially off points, as readily as if they had a certain degree of motion imparted to them by the gentle ripple of the waters. For when perfectly still the decoys, no matter how well made or proportioned, lose that lifelike appearance which they present when bobbing up and down as if in the very act of feeding ; and, con- sequently, are wanting in their chief attraction for the ducks that may be on the wing in quest of more secure and fruitful feeding- places. * Decoys made of solid blocks of wood are preferable to those made hollow ; they are less expensive and not so easily injured by the shot, and also require far less gentle handling. From fifty to one hundred are necessary for point-shooting, — the more the better. 340 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. We h&ve before us a late number of the Spirit of the Times^ which contains an excellent article on duck-shooting, wherein is described a very ingenious plan adopted by the writer for impart- ing this particular motion to the decoys on a still day ; and, as the expedient is quite novel as well as practicable, we shall transfer the description of it in the words of the author to these pages, feeling sure that it will prove serviceable to some of our sporting friends under like circumstances : — " Ducks not decoying well on calm days, of which we had quite a number in December, we hit upon a somewhat novel expedient to attract their attention to our decoys. A dozen stakes of about two feet in length were firmly driven into the soft bed of the river, at a distance of some forty yards from the blinds so that at low- water their upper ends were quite a foot beneath the surface. Through the tops of these stakes, on which we had bored holes of an inch in diameter, having rings of stout iron wire inserted in them to prevent chafing, were passed strings of the proper length, one of the ends of which was carried into the blind, while the others were attached to the necks of the decoy-ducks. These latter were anchored by heavy anchors at such a distance from the stakes that, when pulled upon by the strings, the anchors remaining firm, they were suddenly drawn head-foremost beneath the water, represent- ing very fairly the diving of the real fowl. The ends of the strings within the blind were attached to small sticks, four in number, being three to each, and one person could thus manage at the same time all or a portion of the decoys. "Around these divers, (as we termed them,) which were scattered over a considerable extent of water, were set the usual number of decoys, taking care to place the latter so as not to interfere with the action of the strings of the former. Not being aware of its ever having been tried before, we were exceedingly anxious about the result of our experiment ; and on the first calm day, all being prepared, we looked anxiously for the appearance of a flock of ducks with which to test its success. A bunch of canvas-backs passing down the river soon came in sight, but holding their way CANVAS-BACK. 341 SO far out that we despaired of attracting their notice. Whon directly opposite, however, we commenced vigorously working our divers, and, to our surprise and delight, the flock immediately turned in, and, passing back and forth two or three times, came up most beautifully. i " This success at once settled the question of the utility of our device, and during the whole of this day, on which there was not sufficient wind to ruffle the surface of the water, we had excellent Bport, many fowl passing up and down the river, and almost every bunch that were not too far oflf to see our decoys came up fear- lessly and without hesitation ; with single ducks, or when only two or three were together, we were invariably successful. Day after day, the weather being mild and calm for this time of the year, we tried it with complete success, and to this simple expedient we owed decidedly the best portion of our shooting ; its excellence existing not only with regard to the canvas-back, but also to the red-head and scaup-duck. The success with which we met was owing partly to the exceedingly natural appearance of the decoys, for this number of divers scattered through some seventy or eighty gave the semblance of life to the remainder, and, creating a ripple on the water, made them show much better ; besides this, ducks passing at a distance frequently do not see decoys, and a slight motion among the latter is at once sufficient to draw theii attention ; this done, their coming up to such well-gotten-up aflfairs follows almost as a matter of course."* HOLES IN THE ICE. As the season advances, ducks are frequently obliged to abandon their favorite feeding-grounds in the upper bay, owing to the large masses of floating ice that are constantly coming down the Susque- hanna and the smaller streams they are wont to frequent. The canvas-backs are now driven to great extremes to procure food, * See Spirit of the Times, February 5, 1863. 342 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. and are almost constantly on the wing in quest of suitable spots to dive down for the still tender roots of the valisineria. At this juncture, a cruel advantage is taken of the half-starved condition of the poor canvas-backs to entice them within the reach of th8 murderous guns of those who lie in ambuscade upon the shores of the Gunpowder, Bush, Elk, and the many other smaller streams which are now frozen over. A large hole of many feet in diameter is cut in the ice directly over some choice feeding-shoal, suflSciently near, however, to the land to allow of its being raked by the guns of those concealed behind a blind erected on the shore. Large numbers of wild fowl, more particularly the canvas- backs, may be killed in this way, and the shooter can lie still and bang away at the ducks all day long, as they will oftentimes con- tinue coming and going as fast almost as he can load, provided they are driven to the extremity we have mentioned above. These seasons of scarcity are not by any means unusual ; and a friend of the author informs him that he has killed as many as one hundred and fifty canvas-backs over one of these feeding-holes in one day on the Gunpowder River. POINT-SHOOTING. Several of the above plans of shooting ducks may be said to be illegitimate ways of sporting, although pursued indiscriminately by all those of our friends who participate in wild-fowl shooting. T^ie really sportsmanlike way of killing canvas-backs, however, is for the shooter to station himself on some one of the many points or havB along the bay-shore or its tributaries that the ducks fly over in their course to and from their feeding-grounds. Much depends, in this kind of shooting, upon the disposition of the ele- ments; for neither pleasure nor success can be reasonably ex- pected if the weather is intensely cold or the wind blowing fresh from a quarter that carries the ducks oflf from the point rather than on it. On the other hand, if the wind and weather prove favorable and the ducks are flying briskly, there is not a more delightful way CANVAS-BACK. 343 of enjoying one's self than in point-shooting. Great skill and judgment are requisite to strike the ducks ; and when thus sud- denly stopped in their rapid course, they present a beautiful sight as they come tumbling down with a heavy plash from a height of one, two, or even three, hundred feet. It is this kind of duck-shooting that either displays the igno- rance or dexterity of the sportsman ; for, without long practice in this particular branch, the best general shooter in the country would appear to little advantage alongside even of an indifferent ducker. The principal sites on the Chesapeake Bay where sportsmen resort for this kind of pastime are the points immediately about Havre de Grace, the Narrows of Spesutia, a few miles farther down, Taylor's Island, Abbey Island, Legoe's Point, Marshy Point, Bengie's Point, Robbins's and Ricket's Point, Maxwell's Point, and Carrol's Island. There are also some good points about Elk and Northeast Rivers, and a few on the western shore.* Carrol's Island has long been in possession of a club of sports- men, who regularly resort to this favorite spot during the ducking season, and seldom return home without being heavily laden with the rich spoils of their skill. Not only canvas-backs, but the larger species of wild fowl, are killed at Carrol's Island. Numbers of swans and geese are seen flying about these points ; and the ambitious sportsman will often have an opportunity to bring down with his steady hand the most majestic as well as the most beautiful of all the feathered race. If any of our readers should feel this * There is a considerable difference between bar-shooting &nd point-shootinff. The latter we have already described ; and, to make the former intelligible to our read- ers, we must premise our remarks by stating that, along the shores of the Chesa- peake, the land stretching out into the bay to form these shooting-points is often a mere narrow peninsula, termed a bar, over which the ducks are constantly passing and repassing to their feeding-grounds, without going out of their usual course to weather the points, as they would do under ordinary circumstances ; most of the shooting, therefore, is perpendicular, and consequently far more difficult than when shooting directly off the point. Maxwell's Point is thus formed by a very narrow strip of land. The shooting- points on the Elk River are Locust Point, Plumb Point, Little and Big Welsh. Nearly all these shooting-points are rented out 344 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. laudable ambition — and where is the tyro who will not? — we trust that he may prove more successful than we did at our d^but upon swan-shooting; having, much to our mortification, fired both bar- rels of a heavy duck-gun from behind an ambush into a noble flock of sixteen swans quietly feeding on the water within sixty yards of us, without even as much as rumpling a single feather of their plumage. But then there was a reason why, as all sportsmen have good excuses for their bad shooting ; at all events, they strive very hard to concoct plausible ones, by which to gull their companions. But in this case, unfortunately for our credit as a marksman, the gun was neither strange, bad, nor overloaded ; neither did it snap, hang fire, overshoot nor undershoot its mark; but the plain and simple fact is — shall we have recourse to so hackneyed a plea ? — to cut the matter short and solve the mystery, we had no number B B shot in the barrels, one of our companions having drawn the charge the night before, by way of affording himself some amusement at our expense on the following day. Jokers, however, often get hurt with the recoil of their own weapons ; and so it was in this case. As we were entirely alone, and separated from the projector of this trick when we fired at the swans, we suspected something wrong, and did not relate the cir- cumstance till after he had confessed drawing the load and ex- pressed a desire to know the result of our first two shots ; and then, greatly to his chagrin, he learned that we might have had added to our lot of ducks several noble cygnets, if he had restrained his silly propensity to make us a laughing-stock for the company. Such an opportunity to distinguish ourself in the field of wild-fowl shooting we never again expect to meet with, as we are satisfied that we should have killed, on this occasion, not less than six swans, and perhaps more ; for they were all huddled together in such a manner, when we drew on them, that hardly one could have escaped from the effects of our fire.* * We do not mean to assert that we might hare bagged the whole sixteen by one " coup de fusil," or even with two ; but we do say, most positively, that scarcely one could have gotten off without carrying a few pellets of shot with him. CANVAS-BACK. 345 ART OF SHOOTING DUCKS. We have now nearly drawn to a close the whole subject of wild- fowl shooting ; but little remains to say further, except, perhaps, an effort on our part to instruct beginners in the art of shooting ducks, both on the wing and water. Without some instructions on this head, and a great deal of practice besides, we can assure the most determined tyro that he would make but a poor show of shooting among the skilful duckers of the Chesapeake. He might, however, stand an equal chance with the oldest of them, provided he could ever be so fortunate as to meet with canvas-backs in the same predicament that a correspondent of the Spirit states that some punters found a flock of black and gray ducks on the ice of Little Creek, in Canada ; that is, too fat to fly, and wanting in energy sufficient to get out of the way when pursued. The particulars of this sporting incident being so very curious and unique, we think it worth while to transfer to our pages the extract of the letter containing the details, leaving it for naturalists and sportsmen to explain the phenomenon as they best can. As for ourselves, we do not feel inclined to believe that ducks could become too fat to fly, in the month of December, in the bleak regions of Canada, and doubt very much whether such an occur- rence could be so general under any circumstances, no matter how plenty the most nutritious food might be. Might not the singular conduct of these fowl be attributed rather to sickness produced by some unnatural cause, or perhaps the eating of some deleterious substance forced upon them by the severity of the weather ? How- ever, here is the extract ; we give it as we find it : — "By-the-by, talking of cold, I have a most extraordinary cir» cumstance to tell you in the sporting way. Two punters last week went to the Long Island marsh, which has been for some time frozen up, for the purpose of trapping. Walking along the ice near the creek, — I think called Little Creek, — they saw a great numbei of ducks on the ice, and crawled up very cautiously to get a shot. They were, however, much surprised, on coming near them, to find 346 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. that they did not appear at all alarmed, and concluded that they must be frozen, or something of the sort ; they consequently did not fire, but continued to approach until they caught one. Upon this the others scattered, but did not attempt to fly ; and a chase ensued, which ended in the capture of no less than seventy-six, all black and gray ducks, and one wild goose. The next day they came across some more in the same way, and took thirty-four : in all, one hundred and eleven. Did you ever see or hear the like of that ? — a novel sort of duck-hunting ! The birds were actually so fat that the punters attribute their success in taking them to their inability to rise in consequence." Canvas-backs fly with great strength and velocity, and require a heavy blow to bring them down ; if winged only, it is almost use- less to pursue them either with a dog or in a boat, as they dive with so much celerity, and swim such great distances under water, that it is next to an impossibility to overtake them, or even to shoot them if within gunshot, as they only come to the top of the water for an instant, and duck down again before a snap-shot could get a range on them even with a light partridge-gun, let alone a heavy duck-gun. Dogs accustomed to duck-shooting soon learn this fact, as before stated, and will not be induced to follow after a wounded canvas-back if able to dive. The shooter will therefore see at once the importance of striking canvas-backs in a vital spot. The head and neck are the portions wc should always endeavor to hit, as a single pellet of shot lodged in these portions of the body will do as much execution as a half-dozen imbedded in the breast or other fleshy parts. To accomplish this, many cir- cumstances must be taken into consideration, and must be run over in one's mind at a moment when there is not a second to ponder on the subject. For example, we should be able to tell at a glance the probable distance the ducks are from us, their height, the velo- city with which they are flying, the course they are pursuing, &c. &c. ; for without a just appreciation of all these particulars we shall be very apt to shoot over them, under them, before them, or behind them. This kind of rapid mental calculation, though very CANVAS-BACK. 347 troublesome at first, will soon become a kind of intuitive habit bj practice, and the gun will be found almost of itself to take the proper direction, seemingly unguided by any special will of the shooter. FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS. Never shoot at ducks as they are coming towards you ; wait till they are on a line with your person, or till they have passed you, as it is almost impossible for shot to penetrate through the thick plumage of a duck when presented in this position. As the ducks are approaching, raise your gun, take sight on them, and follow the foremost with the eye and weapon until they come immedi- ately overhead, or rather in a line parallel with your body ; then slide the gun with a quick motion a short distance in front of the flying column, being careful, however, to preserve its range directly in their course, and fire without stopping the motion of the arm. The distance which the gun is thus thrown before the ducks de- pends entirely upon their probable distance from the shooter, the velocity with which they are flying, and the other points already alluded to above, all of which must be ascertained in a moment of time, when the eye is resting upon the birds along the barrel of the gun. One or two feet will nearly always be necessary to insure success in bringing down canvas-backs, and sometimes even as much as ten feet is not too far in advance, if the wind is blowing fresh and the ducks travelling before it, as they most fre- quently do. It should always be borne in mind that most ducks 348 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. fly with amazing velocity ; and the great error committed by all beginners, and even by experienced shooters, is that they deliver their shot behind the bird. The range of the sight should be rather above than below the ducks, to prevent the pellets from falling too low before reaching their proper destination. The various points on the narrows of Spesutia Island are perhaps the most frequented of all localities in the upper bay for duck-shooting ; and it is seldom that the sportsman will be disappointed in visiting these grounds, as the ducks are passing up and down these waters nearly all day, but more particularly in the morning and afternoon. Canvas-backs commence flying very early, and it is necessary for the sportsman to be up and on the ground betimes, as he will have an opportunity of trying his skill as soon as it shall be light enough to see the ducks which he will hear moving over his head in uninterrupted numbers for an hour before daybreak. The morn- ing flights continue an hour, or two after dawn, although, as before stated, many ducks keep in motion all day long ; but the greater portion of them are busily engaged feeding after this time, and, if flying, endeavor to avoid these exposed points, where they have every reason to apprehend danger. Canvas-backs, in fact, are disposed to keep clear of the shores at all times ; but when impelled by a strong breeze that sets them towards these points, they are not easily turned froiA their course, it not being often necessary to employ any kind of device to screen the sportsman from observa- tion, provided he remain motionless until the ducks have come suffi- ciently near to be in range of the gun. It is better that the dress should not be too conspicuous ; a drab overcoat and cap of the same color is the most suitable for concealment ; and, if possible, station yourself against a bush, tree, or some dark object, if there are no blinds erected. When the canvas-backs are flying fast and in great numbers, an eager sportsman had better take two guns with him, and have an assistant to load while he fires ; and in this way he will get double the number of shots, without the hurry and excitement of charging fast. CANVAS-BACK. 349 Captain Hawker very justly remarks: — "Never look up while loading ; you can do no good by it, and you will only put yourself in a flurry, and perhaps break your ramrod. If your man, (assist- ant,) knowing you have no gun loaded, says, * Look out, sir !* why — I had almost said — knock him down." TO SHOOT DUCKS SITTING. Having learned the art of shooting flying, the tyro may feel disposed to treat with contempt any endeavor on our part to teach him so simple a thing as to shoot wild fowl while sitting on the water, within, we will say, fifty or a hundred yards of our ambush. Nevertheless, we can assure him that it is not such an easy matter as he supposes, and he will upon trial soon find to his satisfaction what we say to be true ; and, without paying proper regard to our instructions on this point, he will often have the mortification of seeing the ducks escape from his fire, when he ought by due management to have killed at least a dozen or more. It seems to be a very simple thing to point the gun in a direct range of a flock of ducks, and cut a complete lane, as it were, through their ranks with a heavy charge of powder and shot ; but such, unfortunately for the tyro, is not the case. The young sportsman generally commits one of two errors in shooting wild fowl ; that is, he either undershoots or overshoots the game, according to the distance they are from him. If within thirty, forty, or fifty, or even seventy yards, the shot almost invariably passes over the ducks ; if beyond this distance, the load most frequently falls far short of the in- tended mark. When the shot is first impelled from the mouth of a large duck- gun held on a level, it has an upward tendency from a point-blank range, which it preserves for an indefinite distance, according to the quantity of powder used and the force with which the weapon shoots. When it has reached a certain distance it begins to lose the upward impetus, and, therefore, must fall sooner or later before losing entirely its projectile force. Any one can easily ascertain this fact by trying the experiment on the water, if not 350 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. convinced of it by previous observation. This being the case, the force of our assertion will be readily seen ; that is, when the ducks are but a short distance off, the load will most likely pass over the spot within the point-blank range of the gun and be distributed some distance beyond ; while, on the other hand, the ducks being much farther off, the shot will most likely fall short of their in- tended destination, or, in other words, drop within the point-blank range of the eye. When the ducks are a short distance from our station, the foremost ones, if there be many, should be in full relief over the sight of the gun; and then, most probably, if shooting on a level, as is most frequently the case on the shores where wild fowl are pursued, the leader of the troop which we select for our guide will escape from the dire effects of our volley, that shall spread death and destruction in his rear. If, on the contrary, the ducks are a long distance off, be sure that the foremost ducks are entirely under the range of the barrels, and then we shall most likely rake the front and middle columns, if not sweep the whole mass. For other information regarding shooting ducks, we refer to our chapter on wild-fowl shooting in general, and beg to close the present subject, as some one has done before us, with the spirited lines of Wilson, descriptive of the shooting of these celebrated birds. ■ Slow round an opening point we softly steal, Where four large ducks in playful circles wheel. The far-famed canvas-backs at once we know, Their broad, flat bodies wrapped in pencilled snow ; The burnished chestnut o'er their necks that shone, Spread deepening round each breast a sable zone. Wary they gaze ; our boat in silence glides ; The slow-moved paddles steal along the sides ; Quick-flashing thunders roar along the flood, And three lie prostrate, vomiting their blood ! The fourth aloft on whistling pinions soared ; One fatal glance the fiery thunders poured ; Prone drops the bird amid the dashing wave?, And the clear stream his glossy plumage laves." CANVAS-BACK. 351 THE PRESENT AND FUTURE NUMBERS OF DUCKS UPON CHESA- PEAKE BAY. *' Still files of ducks in streaming thousands pour ; At every bend their rising torrents roar." Notwithstanding the immense multitude of canvas-backs which annually resort to the waters of the Chesapeake Bay, they are now said to be far less numerous than they were some years ago. Of this fact we are not able to judge, but feel satisfied that the species, although killed in numbers still greater than they have been heretofore, can never become extinct, as some persons appre- hend. The greatest safeguard to the continuation of the whole duck race is the circumstance of their breeding in regions so remote. They are besides so prolific, that every succeeding au- tumn will bring down to their former haunts a wonderful increase to the great numbers of those that necessarily escape the general massacre. The large and increasing demand, however, for ducks from the Chesapeake in particular, and the ingenious methods resorted to to kill them, will no doubt eventually drive the larger portion of the canvas-backs from their favorite feeding-grounds, and thus cause them to become more widely dispersed over the whole country. The comparative scarcity of them on these waters will, perhaps, induce the erroneous belief of their speedy extinction ; but such a thing we deem impossible, owing, as already stated, to the habits of the whole duck tribe during the period of incubation. During the season of 1850 and 1851, canvas-backs were very plenty, and, owing to the unusual mildness of the weather and the consequent increased slaughter of them from the surface-boats, they were sold at unprecedented low prices in our markets. The early portion of the season of 1854 and 1855 was equally prolific of the feathered race, insomuch that greater slaughter of wild fowl was made on the flats of the Chesapeake and its numerous tributaries than in any previous year. No less than three thou- sand head of various kinds of ducks were killed in the vicinity of Havre de Grace alone on the first day which the duckers in a body 352 LEWIS S AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. agreed to make use of their batteries. The temperature during the months of October and November of the following season of 1855 and 1856 being uncommonly moderate, but few canvas-backs, comparatively speaking, made their appearance on the Chesapeake before December. The weather soon after becoming intensely cold, and continuing so for several weeks, the destruction of ducks on those far-famed feeding-grounds was necessarily quite limited in comparison with the preceding years, and all descriptions of wild fowl sold in our markets at very high prices. CHAPTER XXIV. DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF DUCKS. RED-HEADED DUCK, OR RED-HEAD. ANAS FERINA. " Beyond a point, just opening to the view, A fleet of ducks collect their scattered crew ; Part, soon alarmed, with sudden splattering, soar, The rest, remaining, seek the farther shore." HABITS, DESCRIPTION, ETC. HE red-head, second alone in delicacy of flavor to the canvas-back, will now claim our attention. It frequents very much the same grounds with the preceding variety, although not so exclusively wedded to the waters of the Chesapeake but that it can be found in other localities in considerable profusion, even during the luxuriance of the valisineria. The red-head, like the poachard, or bald-patc, feeds on the blades of the water-celery, 23 363 354 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. when it cannot filch the tender roots from the canvas-backs. It is often shot in the Delaware, Hudson, and other rivers, and visits the streams of the South as the winter progresses. The flesh of these fowls is so near akin to that of the canvas-backs, that the most delicate palate can hardly distinguish one from the other ; and we have seen many amusing mistakes made by persons professing to be able to tell one duck from the other when served for the table. "The red-head is twenty inches in length and two feet six inches in extent; bill dark slate, sometimes black, two inches long, and seven-eighths of an inch thick at the base, furnished with a large broad nail at the extremity ; irides flame-colored ; plumage of the head long, velvety and inflated, running high above the base of the bill; head, and about two inches of the neck, deep glossy reddish-chestnut; rest of the neck and uppei part of the breast black, spreading round to the back ; belly white, becoming dusky towards the vent by closely-marked undulating lines of black ; back and scapulars bluish-white, rendered gray by numerous transverse waving lines of black ; lesser wing-coverts brownish-ash ; wing-quills very pale slate, dusky at the tips ; lower part of the back and sides under the wings brownish-black, crossed with regular zigzag lines of whitish ; vent, rump, and tail-coverts, black ; legs and feet dark ash." The female has the upper part of the head dusky brown, and the plumage generally is not so bright as that of the male. The red-head weighs from a pound and a half to two pounds. This duck resembles very closely the poachard, red-headed widgeon, or dun-bird, of England, and is considered by many as the same identical bird. The description of the one corresponds very much with that of the other, as will be seen by the following, taken from Daniel. " The poachard is about the size of a widgeon, weighs one pound twelve ounces ; its length is nineteen inches ; breadth two feet and a half; the bill is broader than the widgeon's, of a deep lead-color, with a black tip ; irides orange ; the head and neck deep chestnut; the lower part of the ueck and breast, RED-HEADED DUCK, OR RED-HEAD. 355 and upper part of the back, dusky black ; scapulars and wing- coverts nearest the body of a grayish white, elegantly marked with narrow lines of black ; the exterior wing-coverts and quills dusky brown ; the belly ash-colored and brown ; the tail consists of twelve short feathers of a deep gray; the legs lead-colored. The female has the head of a pale reddish-brown," &c. From the above description, and the investigations of naturalists, we are led to suppose that these two birds are identical ; and there* fore it will not perhaps be deemed irrelevant to the subject to in- troduce a short history of the plan pursued in England for the capture of this fowl upon an extensive scale : — "These birds (poachards) are eagerly sought by the London poulterers, under the name of dun-birds, as they are deemed ex- cellent eating. The greater part of what appear in the markets are caught in decoys; but the construction and mode of working is perfectly distinct from that wherein the other wild fowl are taken. A decoy for dun-birds is called a flight-pond, and has nets fastened to tall stout poles twenty-eight or thirty feet long ; at the bottom of each pole is a box fixed, filled with heavy stones, sufficient to elevate the poles and nets the instant an iron pin is withdrawn, which retains the nets and poles flat upon the reeds, small willow boughs, or furze ; within the nets are small pens made of reeds, about three feet high, for the reception of the birds that strike against the net and fall down ; and such is the form and shortness of wing in the poachard, that they cannot ascend again from their little enclosures if they would; besides, the numbers which are usually knocked into these pens preclude all chance of escape from them by the wing. A decoy-man will sometimes allow the haunt of dun-birds to be so great that the whole surface of the pond shall be covered with them previous to his attempting to take one. Upon such occasions, he bespeaks all the assistants he can get, to complete the slaughter by breaking their necks. When all is ready, the dun-birds are roused from the pond ; and, as all wild fowl rise against the wind, the poles in that quarter are unpinned, and fly up with the nets at the instant the dun-birds begin to lear^ 356 LEWIS S AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. the surface of the water, so as to meet them in their first ascent, and are thus beat down by hundreds. At the pond of Mr. Burton, at Goldanger, in Essex, as many poachards have been taken at one drop as filled a wagon, so as to require four stout horses to carry them away ; and the lower birds in the pens have been known to be killed and pressed entirely flat from the numbers of their com- panions heaped above them by the fatal stoppage of the poles and nets." ANAS AMERICANA . HIS fowl, like the red-head, during ito sojourn on the Chesapeake and Potomac, is the constant companion of the canvas- back, upon whose superior skill in diving it depends for a supply of the tender root of the valisineria, which it filches from these ducks as soon as they come to the top of the water with it in their mouths. The bald-pates, as these ducks are most commonly called on the Chesapeake, are not far inferior in flavor to the canvas-back, and when in good order it is not easy to distinguish them from the above duck. Those killed on other streams, though excellent eating, will not compare with those that feed on the flats of the Chesapeake. Widgeons are extensively scattered throughout the wtiole of our Atlantic States, and are abundant in some of the West India islands ; they are well known in the Delaware Bay. 357 368 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. DESCRIPTION. "The widgeon, or bald-pate, measures twenty-two inches m length and thirty inches in extent ; the bill is of a slate-color ; the nail black; the front and crown cream-colored, sometimes nearly white, the feathers inflated ; from the eye backwards to the middle of the neck behind extends a band of deep, glossy green, gold, and purple; throat, chin, and sides of the neck before, as far as the green extends, dull yellowish-white, thickly speckled with black ; breast and hind-part of the neck hoary bay, running in under the wings, where it is crossed with fine waving lines of black ; whole belly white; vent black; back and scapulars black, thickly and beautifully crossed with undulating lines of vinous bay ; lower part of the back more dusky ; tail-coverts long, pointed, whitish, crossed as the back ; tail pointed, brownish ash ; the two middle feathers an inch longer than the rest, and tapering ; shoulder of the wing brownish ash ; wing-coverts, immediately below, white, forming a large spot ; primaries brownish ash ; middle secondaries black, glossed with green, forming the speculum; tertials black, edged with white, between which and the beauty-spot several of the secondaries are white. "The female has the whole head and neck yellowish- white, thickly speckled with black, very little rufous on the breast ; the back is dark brown. The young males, as usual, very much like the females during the first season, and do not receive their full plumage until the second year. They are also subject to a regular change every spring and autumn." This fowl, it will be seen, resembles the English widgeon, whewer, or whim, both in appearance and habits. The American variety is, perhaps, a little heavier, and the plumage richer. Widgeons do not feed much during the day, but remain listlessly on the sand-flats or hidden among the herbage of the marshes ; but as soon as night comes they are in motion, and may be heard repair- ing in considerable numbers to the various feeding-grounds which they are wont to frequent. These fowl are very abundant on tho AMERICAN WIDGEON, OR BALi)-i>AtE. 359 coasts of Great Britain, and the numbers slaughtered in the course of a season by the sportsmen and fowlers are enormous. They are much esteemed in London, and eagerly sought after by the poul- terers as a ready article of sale. They are pursued by the English punters almost entirely by night ; they lie in wait for them in those situations which they are most likely to visit or pass over in their course to the feeding-grounds. The best weather for this sport is a clear, windy, half moonlight night, provided the wind does not blow from you, as the ducks may smell you: in fact, it is always necessary to get to the leeward of wild fowl of all kinds, as their power of scenting is very great. The English variety is easily "domesticated in places where there is plenty of water, and are much admired for their beauty, sprightly look, and frolicsome manners." The same is said of the American widgeon. Bald-pates can be decoyed within gunshot by imitating their peculiar shrill note ; are not apt to dart at decoys off points, ex- cept in foggy weather. They are migratory, and breed in the North, on the coast of Hudson's Bay ; they visit the ricefields of the South during the winter in considerable numbers, and are much esteemed by the planters as an article of food. For further information on the subject of widgeon, we beg to refer the reader to Colonel Hawker, the Magnus Apollo of wild- fowl shooting, as he has very justly been styled. ANAS BOSCHAS. MALLARD, OR WILD DRAKE. ALLARDS are widely disseminated over almost every habitable portion of the globe, and their flesh is alike esteemed in all parts ; and wherever they make their ap- pearance, sportsmen resort to all kinds of expedients to secure them. At a glance, it will be seen that the wild drake is the original stock from which is sprung the puddle-duck of our barnyards, as they differ but little in plumage and general form. The wild bird, however, is a much more noble- looking fowl than those of the same race that have been enslaved by man; and instead of the silly, discordant quach! quack! quack! lazy waddle, inactive life, and singular propensity for dabbling in the filthy oozes of the stable-yard, common to our do- mestic duck, they pursue a cunning, silent, active, and free life. 3G0 361 DESCRIPTION. " The mallard, or common wild drake, is so universally known as scarcely to require a description. It measures twenty-four inches in length by three feet in extent, and weighs upwards of two pounds and a half; the bill is greenish yellow; irides hazel; head, and part of the neck, deep, glossy, changeable green, ending in a narrow collar of white; the rest of the neck and breast are of a dark purplish chestnut; lesser wing-coverts brown-ash; greater crossed near the extremities with a band of white, and tipped with another of deep velvety black ; below this lies the speculum or beauty-spot, of a rich and splendid light purple, with green and violet reflections, bounded on every side with black; quills pale brownish-ash ; back brown, skirted with paler ; scapulars whitish, crossed with fine undulating lines of black ; rump and tail-coverts black, glossed with green ; tertials very broad, and pointed at the ends; tail, consisting of eighteen feathers, whitish, centred with brown-ash, the four middle ones excepted, which are narrow, black, glossed with violet, remarkably concave, and curled upwards to a complete circle ; belly and sides a fine gray, crossed by an infinite number of fine, waving lines, stronger and more deeply marked as they approach the vent ; legs and feet orange-red. " The female has the plumage of the upper parts dark brown, broadly bordered with brownish yellow, and the lower parts yel- low ochre, spotted and streaked with deep brown ; the chin and throat, for about two inches, plain yellowish- white ; wings, bill, and legs, nearly as in the male. " The windpipe of the male has a bony labyrinth, or bladder-like knob, puffing out from the left side. The intestines measure six feet, and are as wide as those of the canvas-back. The windpipe is of uniform diameter until it enters the labyrinth." Like most wild fowl, the mallard breeds in the Far North, and makes its appearance in the autumn among the first of our ducks. It is common throughout all our rivers and fresh-water lakes, but is seldom met with on the sea-coast. As the winter 362 lewis's AMERICAN SPOEfSMAlt. progresses, large numbers continue South, and take up their abode among the ricefields of the Carolinas, where they become very fat and particularly palatable. Their flesh, at all times when the wea- ther is not very severe, is good, as they feed on vegetable matter in preference to any other kind of food, and only partake of fish when they cannot obtain any thing else. Mallards are easily brought within gunshot by means of decoys, used in the way already described under the head of canvas-backs. They are numerous at times on the Delaware, and numbers are killed by shooters hiding themselves in boats and the reeds within range of their stool-ducks, which are set out on the edge of the reeds. They are very fond of the seeds of the wild oats that flourish so profusely on the flats of the Delaware, and their flesh soon becomes delicate and juicy. In England and on the Continent many singular contrivances have been invented to entrap these birds ; and so successful are the fowlers now in this lucrative business that many hundreds are often taken at one draw of the net. The most destructive way of trapping mallards is the plan adopted on the decoy-ponds of England and France, a full accoimt of which may be found in Bewick's British Birds. '*4 '-V ANAS DISCORS. BLUE-WINQED TBAL. LUE-WINGED TEAL are among the Hist of the water-fowl that visit the shores of the Delaware and Chesapeake from the far regions of the North. They arrive among us in September, and remain feeding along the fresh-water shores and mud-flats until driven farther south by the chilling frosts of these regions, as they are a very tender bird, and spend the most of their time in parts where the weather is mild. This little duck appears to be much less cunning than most other varieties of wild fowl, as it is not difficult to approach in a boat or under cover of any simple device. The shooters on the Delaware kill great numbers from the reeds, over stool-ducks set out on the mud ; they stool without difficulty, and drop down among the decoys and go to eating as if they were surrounded by busy companions like themselves. They stool better if the decoys are set in the mud than if in the water, and in this respect differ from every other duck. 364 They are fond of the seeds of the wild oats, and become very fat after feeding on them for a short time. In the South they also become very fat, and are considered most excellent eating ; great numbers are shot as well as caught on the ricefields in traps set by the negroes. The markets of Philadelphia abound with these ducks, which are sold for a mere trifle. They are considered best by epicures when split open and broiled, with a dressing of butter: we prefer them in this way to all other modes of cooking. Blue-winged teal fly with great rapidity and considerable noise ; they drop down suddenly among the reeds, much like a wood- cock. DESCRIPTION. "This species measures about fourteen inches in length and twenty-two inches in extent; the bill is long in proportion, and of a dark, dusky slate ; the front and upper part of the head are black ; from the eye to the chin is a large crescent of white ; the rest of the head and half the neck are of a dark slate, richly glossed with green and violet ; remainder of the neck and breast is black or dusky, thickly marked with semicircles of brownish white, elegantly intersected with each other; belly pale brown, barred with dusky in narrow lines ; sides and vent the same tint, spotted with oval marks of dusky; flanks elegantly waved with large semicircles of pale brown ; sides of the vent pure white, un- der the tail-coverts black ; back deep brownish-black, each feather waved with large semi-ovals of brownish white ; lesser wing-covert a bright light-blue; primaries dusky brown; secondaries black; speculum, or beauty-spot, rich green ; tertials edged with black or light-blue, and streaked' down their middle with white; the tail, which is pointed, extends two inches beyond the wings ; legs and feet yellow, the latter very small ; the two crescents of white before the eyes meet on the throat. "The female differs in having the head and neck of a dull dusky slate, instead of the rich violet of the male ; the hind-head is also GREEN-WINGED TEAL. 366 whitish; the wavings on the back and lower parts more indistinct; wing nearly the same in both." ANAS CRECCA. GREEN-WINGED TEAL. This variety is a little larger than the preceding, and resembles more closely the English teal — is, in fact, considered by naturalists as the same duck. Its habits and disposition are similar to those of the blue-winged, and its flesh of like quality. ANAS ALBEOLA. BUFFEL-KBADED DUCK, OR BUTTER-BALL. HIS little duck is more commonly known as the butter-box, or butter-ball, from the circumstance of its fat, plump little body. It is one of the very first ducks that comes from the North. Its flesh is rather fishy at times ; but we have shot them on the Chesapeake and Delaware of very good flavor. It breeds in the North, flies with great velocity, and dives with considerable facility ; and, when on the wing, utters a quick, guttural note — quack ! quack ! quack ! DESCRIPTION. " The bufiel-headed duck, or rather, as it has originally been, the buffalo-headed duck, from the disproportionate size of its head, is fourteen inches long and twenty-three inches in extent ; the bill is short, and of a light blue or leaden color ; the plumage of the bead and half of the neck is thick, long, and velvety, projecting 866 BUFFEL-HEADED DUCK, OR BUTTER-BALL. 367 greatly over the lower part of the neck ; this plumage on the fore- head and nape is rich glossy green, changing into a shining purple on the crown and sides of the neck ; from the eyes backward passes a broad band of pure white ; iris of the eye dark ; back, wings, and part of the scapulars, black ; rest of the scapulars, lateral band along the wing, and whole breast, snowy white ; belly, vent, and tail-coverts, dusky white ; tail pointed, and of a hoary color. "The female is considerably less than the male, and entirely destitute of the tumid plumage of the head : the head, neck, and upper parts of the body and wings are sooty black, darkest on the crown ; sides of the head marked with a small oblong spot of white ; bill dusky ; lower part of the neck ash, tipped with white ; belly dull white ; vent cinereous ; outer edges of six of the secon- daries and their incumbent coverts white, except the tips of the latter, which are black; legs and feet a livid blue; tail hoary brown." AITAS OBSCURA. DUSKY DUCK, OR BLACK DUCK. USKY or black ducks are known to all our sea-shore shooters, and innumerable quantities are brought to the Philadelphia markets. They meet with ready sale, although their flesh is far inferior to that of many other varieties of wild fowl. They are better known as the black duck, and are shot on the salt marshes of the Delaware. They are very wary, and will not stool. They feed on the small bivalves that are so abundant in these waters, as also along the shores of the creeks and inlets of the Mid- dle States. Black ducks swim and fly with great velocity : their notes resemble those of the mallard, but their flesh is much inferior. As before stated, wild fowl rise almost universally against the wind ; black ducks, however, are an exception to this general rule, as they spring indifferently either with or against the wind. Numbers of black ducks are killed by the gunners lying in wait for them in the route of their return from the sea to the marshes to feed after night. This kind of shooting is termed '^duBking^* DUSKY DUCK, OR BLACK-DUCK. 369 and of course can only be practised with much success on a moon- light night. When the weather is not severe and the ducks are plenty, '^ dusking'' is an agreeable pastime. Black ducks are very wary and sagacious; and it is necessary to hold the most profound silence when dusking, as they change their course or tower high at the slightest noise. DESCRIPTION. " The dusky or black duck is two feet in length and three feet two inches in extent; the bill is of a dark greenish-ash, formed very much like the mallard, and nearly of the same length ; irides dark; upper part of the head deep dusky-brown, intermixed on the forepart with some small streaks of drab ; rest of the head and greater part of the neck pale yellow-ochre, thickly marked with small streaks of blackish brown ; lower part of the neck and whole lower parts deep dusky, each feather edged with brownish white and with fine seams of rusty white; upper parts the same, but rather deeper; the outer vanes of nine of the secondaries bright violet-blue, forming the beauty-spot, which is bounded on all sides by black ; wings and tail sooty brown ; tail-feathers sharp-pointed ; legs and feet dusky yellow ; lining of the wings pure white. "The female has more brown on her plumage, but in other respects difiers little from the male, both having the beauty-spot on the wing. 24 ANAS ACUTA. PINTAIL DUCK, OR SPRIGTAIL. HIS handsome-looking duck is known to our snooters indifferentlj as the pintail or sprigtail. The latter appellation is per- haps the most common. They frequent the fresh-water streams of almost every section of our country, both inland and on the seaboard. They are not very partial to salt water. Sprigtails are shy and vigi- lant; when aroused, they fly confusedly together, so that the shooter has always a fine opportunity to rake the flock when on the wing. They remain with us all winter and breed in the North ; their flesh is sweet and often delicious. DESCRIPTION. " The pintail duck is twenty-six inches in length and two feet ten inches in extent ; the bill is a dusky lead-color ; irides dark hazel ; head and half of the neck pale brown, each side of the neck marked with a band of purple- violet, bordering the white ; 370 PINTAL-DUOK, OR SPKIMiTAIL. 371 hind-part of the upper half of the neck black, bordered on each side by a stripe of white, which spreads over the lower part of the neck before ; sides of the breast and upper part of the back white, thickly and elegantly marked with transverse, undulating lines of black, here and there tinged with pale buff; throat and middle of the belly white, tinged with cream ; flanks finely pencilled with waving lines ; vent white ; under tail-coverts black ; lesser wing- coverts brown-ash ; greater the same, tipped with orange ; below which is the speculum, or beauty-spot, of rich golden green, bor- dered below with a band of black and another of white ; primaries dusky brown ; tertials long, black, edged with white and tinged with rust ; rump and tail-coverts pale ash, centred with dark brown ; tail greatly pointed, the two middle tapering feathers being full five inches longer than the others, and black ; the rest brown-ash, edged with white ; legs a pale lead-color. " The female has the crown of a dark brown color ; neck of a dull brownish- white, thickly speckled with dark brown ; breast and belly pale brownish-white, interspersed with white ; back and root of the neck above black, each feather elegantly waved with broad lines of brownish white — these wavings become rufous on the scapu- lars ; vent white, spotted with dark brown ; tail dark brown, spotted with white ; the two middle tail-feathers half an inch longer than the others. "The sprigtail is an elegantly-formed, long-bodied duck, the neck longer and more slender than most others." ANAS SPONSA. SUMMER-DUCK, OR WOOD-DUCK. UMMER-DUCKS are remarkable for the richness and varied hue of their plumage, and are considered the most beautiful of all the duck tribe. It is spread throughout the whole extent of our country, breeding in almost every State of the Union, and familiarly known to country-people as the wood-duck, from the circumstance of its selecting the hollows of trees to breed in. This fowl delights in the small streams and mill-ponds of the in- terior, and is but seldom met with on the large rivers. They are not often met with in flocks, but are generally found in small families of two or three. The followers of Sir Isaac Walton are generally much more familiar with this fowl than the professed sportsman, as they, in the pursuit of their favorite amusement, spend much of their time in the quiet and secluded haunts which 872 SUMMER-DUCK, OR WOOD-DUCK. 373 these birds affect. Their food consists of seeds and insects, and their flesh at times is excellent. They are easily tamed when taken young, and soon become completely domesticated. DESCRIPTION. "The wood-duck is nineteen inches in length and two feet four mches in extent ; bill red, margined with black ; a spot of black lies between the nostrils, reaching nearly to the tip, which is also of the same color, and furnished with a large hooked nail ; irides orange-red ; front, crown, and pendent crest rich glossy bronze- green, ending in violet, elegantly marked with a line of pure white running from the upper mandible over the eye, and with another band of white proceeding from behind the eye, both mingling their long pendent plumes with the green and violet ones, pro- ducing a rich effect ; cheeks and sides of the upper neck violet ; chin, throat, and collar round the neck pure white, curving up in the form of a crescent nearly to the posterior part of the eye; the white collar is bounded below with black ; breast dark violet- brown, marked on the forepart with minute triangular spots of white, increasing in size until they spread into the white of the belly; each side of the breast is bounded by a large cres- cent of white, and that again by a broader one of deep black; sides under the wings thickly and beautifully marked with fine undulating parallel lines of black, on a ground of yellowish drab ; the flanks are ornamented with broad, alternate, semicircular bands of black and white ; sides of the vent rich light- violet ; tail-coverts long, of a hair-like texture at the sides, over which they descend, and of a deep black, glossed with green; back dusky bronze, reflecting green ; scapulars black ; tail tapering, dark glossy green above, below dusky ; primaries dusky, silvery hoary without, tipped with violet-blue ; secondaries greenish blue, tipped with white; wing-coverts violet-blue, tipped with black; vent dusky; legs and feet yellowish red ; claws strong and hooked. " The female has the head slightly crested ; crown, dark purple • 374 LEWISES AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. behind the eye a bar of white ; chin and throat, for two inches, also white ; head and neck dark drab ; breast, dusky brown, marked with large triangular spots of white ; back dark glossy bronze-brown, with some gold and greenish reflections ; speculum of the wings nearly the same as in the male, but the fine pencil- ling of the sides and the long hair-like tail-coverts are wanting ; the tail is also shorter." ANAS CANADENSIS. CANADA GOOSE. spring. •• Hawnk ! honk ! and for'ard to the nor'ard is the trumpet-tone 1 What goose can lag, or feather flag, or break the goodly cone ? Hawnk I onward to the cool blue lakes where lie our safe love-bowers, No stop, no drop of ocean-brine, near stool or hassock hoary, Our travelling watchword is * our mates, our goslings, and our glory /' Symsonia and Labrador for us are crowned with flowers, And not a breast on wave shall rest, until that heaven is ours. Hawnk! Hawnk I E—eHawnkl" ILD GEESE are widely spread over the whole of the country; and there are few portions of the United States where the honking of the goose is not familiar to the inhabitants. These fowl, in their migrations south and north, are con- sidered the sure harbingers of dreary winter or the near approach of cheerful They breed in the remotest regions of the North, even 876 376 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. perhaps under the very Pole itself, where, undisturbed by the cruel hands of man, they rear their young in the most perfect security, and only leave those peaceful climes when driven from them by the severity of threatening winter. Wild geese make their appearance on the Delaware and Chesa- peake Bays in October ; and when many are flying early in the season it is considered a certain prognostic of a long and hard winter, — a belief in which all the inhabitants of those parts which they visit place implicit confidence. During their journey through the Canadas, their thick ranks are considerably thinned by the slaughter made among them by the Indians, who kill immense numbers for their own support and for that of the English settlements about Hudson's Bay. The geese are cleaned and salted away for the winter's use, and afford the principal article of flesh that the people have to rely upon for several months in the year. Mr. Pennat says, " The English at Hudson's Bay depend greatly on geese of this and other kinds for their support, and in favor- able years kill three or four thousand, which are salted and barrelled. Their arrival is impatiently expected by the inhabit- ants, as they are one of the chief articles of their food and also the harbingers of spring ; and the month is named by the Indians the Q-oose-moon, They appear usually at our settlements in num- bers about St. George's day, and fly northward to nestle in se- curity. They prefer islands to the continent, as farther from the haunts of men. Thus, Marble Island was found in August to swarm with swans, geese, and ducks, — the old ones moulting, and the young unfledged and incapable of flying. The English send out their servants as well as the Indians to shoot these birds on their passage. It is in vain to pursue them ; they therefore form a row of huts made of boughs, at musket-shot distance from each other, and place them in a line across the parts of the vast marshes of the country where the geese are expected to pass. Each stand is occupied by a single person ; these, on the approach of the birds, mimic their cackle so well that the geese will answer, wheel, CANADA GOOSE. 377 and come nearer the hovel. The sportsman keeps motionless and on his knees, with his gun cocked, and never fires till he has seen the eyes of the geese. He fires as they are going from him, then picks up another gun that lies by him and discharges that. The geese killed he sets up on sticks, as if alive, to decoy others ; he also makes artificial birds for the same purpose. In a good day (for they fly in very uncertain and unequal numbers) a single Indian will kill two hundred. Notwithstanding every sort of goose has a differ- ent call, yet the Indians are admirable in their imitation of every one." The geese, on their return to the North, pass through the East- ern States in the months of April and May, early or late, accord- ing to the state of the weather. When in our waters they feed on the leaves, blades, and berries of different marine plants, and the roots of the sedge which grows so abundantly on the salt marshes. Their flight is heavy and laborious, and in the form of a triangle, the flock being led by an old gander. When wounded, they swim and dive with great facility, going long distances under the water. When taken alive, they are easily domesticated, and will breed readily with the tame goose. It is a very common circumstance to see flocks of these geese entirely domesticated in the neighborhood of the waters which they frequented in their original state of freedom. Although they may have become quite tame, and perhaps have reared a brood or two, they are all apt to ex- hibit symptoms of uneasiness as the period for migration approaches, and will sometimes fly off with the wild ones that they hear honking overhead. The Canadian goose is domesticated in England and France, and is considered superior to the common gray goose. Many plans are resorted to by the shooters on our coast to decoy these wary fowl within gunshot, and none more successful than that of imitating their honkings, which most of them can do to perfection. Domestic geese are also used to decoy the wild ones flying over- head ; and they not unfrequently entice them from great heights in the air to alight among them, supposing them to be some of their own companions feeding in safety below. 378 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. They are also shot at night on the ponds and marshes where they go to feed. Numbers are shot over decoys from the sand-flats, or points upon which are sunk boxes, in which the shooter conceals himself. When only wounded, they are difficult to capture, as they swim and dive well, and also possess the power of sinking their bodies in the water with the bill only projecting above the surface, and will continue in this position for some time. Wild geese, when migrating South, sometimes lose their way, more particularly in foggy weather, when they have been known to alight in the immediate vicinity of the farm-houses, apparently much confused and wonder-struck at their peculiar and dangerous position. When feeding, sanding, or sleeping, they always place sentinels on guard, who are regularly relieved at the lapse of an hour or so. These sentinels are ever on the alert, with wide- extended necks, and give the alarm to their companions at the slightest intimation of danger. DESCRIPTION. " The length of this species is three feet ; extent five feet two inches ; the bill is black ; irides dark hazel ; upper half of the neck black, marked on the chin and lower part of the head with a large patch of white, its distinguishing character; lower part of the neck, before, white ; back and wing-coverts brown, each feather tipped with whitish ; rump and tail black ; tail-coverts and vent white ; primaries black, reaching to the extremity of the tail ; tides pale ashy-brown ; legs and feet blackish ash. " The male and female are exactly alike in plumage." SNOW-GOOSE. 379 ANAS HYPERBOREA. SNOW-GOOSE. " Hoarse, heavy geese scream up the distant sky And all the thunders of our boat defy." This beautiful fowl is known upon our coast as the red goose, and makes its appearance in the rivers of the Eastern States early in November, and as the winter progresses proceeds farther South ; it also stops with us on its return to the North early in the spring, or rather late in the winter. Snow-geese are numerous on the coast of Jersey and in the Delaware Bay. They frequent the marshes and reedy shores to feed upon the roots of various marine plants, — more particularly that called sea-cabbage. Their bills being very strong and well supplied with powerful teeth, they pull up with great facility the roots of sedge and all other plants. Their flesh, though not fishy, is strong, but, we think, better than that of the domestic fowl. The same stratagems are used to shoot these fowls as are put into practice to kill the other variety. DESCRIPTION. " The snow-goose is two feet eight inches in length and five feet in extent ; the bill is three inches in length, remarkably thick at the base, and rising high in the forehead, but becomes small and compressed at the extremity, where each mandible is furnished with a whitish rounding nail ; the color of the bill is a purplish car- mine ; the edges of the two mandibles separate from each other in a singular manner for their whole length, and this gibbosity is occupied by dented rows, resembling teeth, these and the parts adjoining being of a blackish color; the whole plumage is of a snowy whiteness, with the exception, first, of the forepart of the head all round as far as the eyes, which is of a yellowish-rust color intermixed with white j and, second, the nine exterior quill- 380 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. feathers, which are black, shafted with white, and white at the root ; the coverts of these last, and also the bastard wing, are sometimes of a pale ash color ; the legs and feet of the same pur- plish carmine as the bill ; iris dark hazel ; the tail is rounded, and consists of sixteen feathers ; that and the wings when shut nearly of a length." Wilson remarks that "the bill of this bird is singularly curious: the edges of the upper and lower gibbosities have each twenty- three indentations or strong teeth on each side; the inside or concavity of the upper mandible has also seven lateral rows of strong projecting teeth; and the tongue, which is horny at the extremity, is armed on each side with thirteen long and sharp bony teeth, placed like those of a saw, with their points directed back- wards ; the tongue turned up, and viewed on its lower side, looks very much like a human finger with its nail. This conformation of the mandibles, exposing two rows of strong teeth, has probably given rise to the epithet 'laughing,' bestowed on one of its varie- ties, though it might with as much propriety have been named the grinning goose*' ANAS BERNICLA. BRANT, OR BRENT. ILSON considers the brant and barnacle goose the same bird. Large flocks of these fowl arrive on the coast of Jersey in the latter part of September or early In October. They remain in these re- gions till the weather gets very cold, and then move off to the South. They feed on shell-fish and marine vegetables : their flesh is sedgy, and often extremely fishy. Our markets are crowded with brant in autumn and spring, and they sell for a mere trifle. They have a hoarse, honking, disagreeable note, and may be heard at a great distance. They are shy birds, and fly high and in long lines. Great numbers of brant are killed about Long Island by shoot- ers concealed in batteries somewhat similar to those used on the Chesapeake Bay for the capture of canvas-backs. Those shot late m the spring are much better eating than at any other time. Unsuccessful attempts have been made to domesticate them, but, 881 382 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. owing to their wild and wandering disposition, but little has been accomplished towards this end. DESCRIPTION. "The brant generally weighs about four pounds avoirdupois, and measures two feet in length and three feet six inches in ex- tent; the bill is about an inch and a half long, and black; the nostril large, placed nearly in its middle ; head, neck, and breast black, the neck marked with a spot of white about two inches below the eye ; belly pale ash, edged with white ; from the thighs back- wards, white; back and wing-coverts dusky brownish-black, the plumage lightest at the tips ; rump and middle of the tail-cover tJ black; the rest of the tail-coverts pure white, reaching nearly to the tip of the tail, the whole of which is black, but usually con- cealed by the white coverts ; primaries and secondaries deep black ; legs also black ; irides dark hazel. " The only material difference observable between the plumage of the male and female is, that in the latter the white spot on the neck is less, and more mottled with dusky. In young birds it is sometimes wanting, or occurs on the front, cheeks, and chin, and sometimes the upper part of the neck only is black ; but in full- plumaged birds of both sexes the markings are very much alike.** *^*^* /r(BTRt^«^ AMERICAN SWAN — CYGNUS AMERICANA; AND TRUMPETER SWAN — CYGNUS BUCINATOR. " The stately-sailing swan Gives out his snoY^y plumage to the gale ; And, arching proud his neck, with oary feet Bears forward fierce, and guards his osier- isle, Protective of his young." WHERE FOUND, ETC. E have two or more varieties of swans which visit the shores of our Atlantic States. At times they are quite nume- rous in the vicinity of Carrol's Island, more particularly if the weather continues boisterous for several days, when they retire from the mid-bay to seek food on the shallows of the coves or under the protection of the islands a considerable distance from the sea. 384 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. Swans are very shy, fly high, and are not easily brought down un- less struck in some vital part. The flesh of the cygnet, or young swan, is considered excellent. We have eaten of it frequently, but cannot say that we have any great predilection in its favor. One thing is certain, however : it is superior to the wild goose, but in- ferior to the canvas-back. Swans are frequently — and, wc may say, easily — domesticated; but they will not thrive save where they can pass most of their time on the water. In such favorable situations for their mode of life, they will breed and live for years contented and happy. Swans, par excellence, are the most beautiful, most elegant, most graceful, and most spotless of all fowl. Their plumage. is perfectly white. The Cygnus Americana is the species most commonly met with. The other varieties are but seldom shot in these parts. Swans, like the rest of the wild fowl, retire to the Far North in the early spring. CHAPTER XXV. LEPUS SYLVATICUS= DESCRIPTION, HABITS, GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS, ETC "SUMMER DRESS. UR on the back yellowish brown ; soft fur, from the roots to the surface plumbeous ; the long hairs which extend beyond th=i fur, and give the general color to the ani- mal, are for three-fourths of their length lead-colored, then yellowish, and are tipped with black ; ears dark brown on the outer surface, destitute of the distinct black bor- der seen in the Northern hare, and not tipped with black like those of the Polar and A^ariable hare; whiskers nearly all black; iris light brownish-yellcw ; a circle of fawn-color around the eye, more conspicuous nearest the forehead ; cheeks grayish ; chin, undei 26 385 386 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. surface of body, and inner surface of legs, light grayish-white ; tail, upper surface grayish brown, beneath white ; breast light yellowish- gray ; behind the ears a broad patch of fawn-color ; outer surface of fore-legs and thighs yellowish brown. "winter color. " Very similar to the above ; in a few specimens the hairs are whitest at the tips ; in others black tips prevail. This hare never becomes white in any part of our country, and so far as our re- searches have extended we have scarcely found any variety in its color. " DIMENSIONS. ADVLT XAUC. INCHXS. USIB. "Length of head and body 15 0 " head 3 5 " ears 3 0 " tail (vertebrae) 1 2 " tail, including fur 2 2 From heel to end of middle olaw 3 7 Weight 2 lbs. 7 oz." — Audubon. LOCALITY. The gray rabbit is met with as far north as New Hampshire, and abounds in the Middle, Southern, and Western States. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS. The timid and interesting little creature now under considera- tion, we may say, is universally known as the rabbit ; this appella- tion, however, notwithstanding its general use, is a very unjust one, as will be learned from the following remarks on this head. Those naturalists who have studied the habits and characteristics of the genus lepus of America do not hesitate for a moment in placing all the varieties yet met with in their proper rank of hare. And, moreover, we shall, without doubt, surprise some of our readers when we tell them that we have no rabbit — that is, true rabbit — indigenous to this country. The hare and rabbit so closely resemble each other in many THE AMERICAN HARE. 387 points that it is not at all astonishing that they should often be confounded one with the other ; in fact, nothing but the discrimi- nating eyes of science could have pointed out the dividing-line between these two nearly-allied species. The principal and most striking difference in the habits of these two species is the circumstance of one living in communities and burrowing in the ground, while the other lives singly or in pairs, and makes its nest upon the open surface ; this peculiarity of the American hare is almost sufficient of itself to prove the en- tire identity of the species with that of the English hare, (Lepus cuniculus.) We have, however, still stronger grounds than this for placing our rabbit, as it is termed, in the same rank with that of the Euro- pean hare. The American hare, as the English, breeds about three times in the course of a year ; in the South they may possibly, owing to the effects of climate, bring forth more frequently. Their nest is of the rudest character, and constructed with little or no care for any thing like warmth or comfort ; it is generally found upon the open ground, in an old field, perhaps protected somewhat from the weather and easy observation by the overhanging leaves of a shrub or other small plant. The rabbit, on the contrary, has several litters in the course of the year, and selects with some degree of care the choicest part of its burrow for the deposit of its young ; the nest is made of the softest materials within the reach of the anxious mother, and she even plucks the downy fleece from her own body to furnish a soft and warm bed for the reception of her tender offspring. The young of the Lepus sylvaticus, at birth, are covered with hair ; their eyes wide open and ready for immediate use ; their ears fully developed and eager for action ; their bodies supple and theii limbs pliant, even so much so that they possess sufficient strength to run almost at the moment of birth. The young of the rabbit, on the contrary, are deposited in the dark recesses of the burrow, entirely destitute of any protectioii in 388 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. the way of fur, their eyes shut up and their ear-flaps even closed; their bodies also are soft and delicate, and their limbs feeble ; in fact, the litter is entirely dependent upon the anxious care of its parent for protection and support for a considerable time after birth. The flesh also of the hare and rabbit is quite dissimilar ; the former when boiled is dark, the latter white ; there is also a game- flavor about the one that the other does not possess. The rabbit is a lively, frolicsome little animal, delighting to pop in and out of its burrow at all hours of the day, to bask for a few moments in the sun and collect something to eat, and then away at the slightest token of alarm to the depths of its subterranean abode. The hare is a timid, lonely creature, sitting motionless for hours, crouched up within its form^ — a mere space the size of the animal upon the open ground, — or perhaps snugly stowed away under a pile of brush, stones, or rubbish of any description whatever. The rabbit, when pursued by dogs, takes to his burrow as the only secure refuge. The hare, on the contrary, trusts in a great measure to his speed and cunning to insure his safety ; and when pursued by dogs the American species resort to the same method of escaping from their enemies as the English variety, — that is, doubling. The construc- tion of the hind-legs is also the same in the one as in the other, being not less than ten inches in length, which is large in proportion to the size of the body ; those of the rabbit are much smaller. The American hare has from three to five young at a litter, sometimes six, and rarely seven. If it were not for the wonderful fecundity of this animal, the whole race would soon become extinct, from the constant and never-ceasing depredations of its numerous enemies. Nature, however, wise in all her plans, compensates for the waste on one side by an extraordinary fruitfulness on the other, thus balancing the losses from destruction by that of reproduction, in a ratio which is always sufficient to insure the prolonged exist- ence of the race. THE AMERICAN HARE. 389 The hare is peculiarly adapted for speed, not only on account of the general muscularity of its body, but also from the peculiar construction of its hind-limbs, which, being so very long, assist the animal greatly in going up-hill, — in fact, gives it considerable ad- vantage over the pursuer, and of which, from cunning, or, more properly, instinct, it avails itself by taking to rising ground as soon as come upon. The hare is always in good running condition at that season of the year when it is most likely to be pursued by dogs or other less dangerous foes ; this circumstance also we may regard as a peculiar provision of nature, for if the timid little creature were permitted to repose in ease and silence, entirely free from apprehension of danger except at the moment when really attacked, the body would soon become overloaded with fat, which would necessarily prevent it from taking advantage of that fleet- ness which, when in condition, insures its safety. The American hare has considerable speed, and can run for a short time without giving out ; the hairy covering of its feet gives it a decided advantage over the dog in a race, during dry or frosty weather. When hotly pursued, hares most frequently take to holes, hollowed trunks of trees, or secrete themselves under brush- heaps, old logs, or piles of stone. When first roused, the hare dashes off in good style, and at a speed that soon leaves its pur- suers far in the wake ; but, unfortunately, for want of sagacity, puss exhausts her strength long before the scent grows cold or the hounds begin to tire, and, if it were not for their taking to holes, piles of logs or brush, they would soon fall victims to almost any cur that has the bottom and perseverance to follow in their trail. The construction and position of the eyes in the head are such as to enable the hare to encompass nearly a whole circle in its glance, with scarcely any motion of the head; the eyelids are never completely closed, not even in sleep. The ears also are so contrived as to collect the slightest sound arising in any quarter. With such endowments, it is seldom that a hare is come upon un- awares, although he may spring up from beneath our very feet, or from before the nose of our dogs ; he was well apprized however, of 390 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. our close proximity, and only trusted, as he had often done before, that, owing to the striking semblance between his color and that of the ground or surrounding herbage, he would escape unnoticed. The hare may be termed a nocturnal animal, "as it is commonly at the earliest dawn, while the dew-drops still glitter on the herb- age, or when the fresh verdure is concealed beneath a mantle of glistening frost, that the timorous hare ventures forth in quest of food, or courses undisturbed over the plains." Although sportsmen meet with hares in considerable numbers at all hours of the day, it must be recollected that they are not found feeding, but, on the contrary, are generally roused from their forms, where perhaps they have been crouching for hours in undisturbed repose. "During moonlight nights, the timorous hare may be seen sporting with its companions in unrestrained gambols, frisking with delighted eagerness around its mate, or busily engaged in cropping its food." THEIR FOOD. The hare is not a very dainty animal as to the choice of her food; every thing produced upon a farm or cultivated in the garden is alike palatable to her, and she not unfrequently makes great havoc with the autumnal turnip and cabbage-crops ; she also frequents the cornfields to glean the scattered grains, and visits the orchards in quest of the juicy apple. The partiality on the part of the hare for the last-mentioned fruit is turned to fearful account against them by those who bait their traps and snares with it, for the dainty morsel thus laid in their very path seldom fails to entice an unwary hare within its deceptive clutches. Later in the season, when food is scarce and nothing more palatable is at hand, hares often become very destructive to the young nurseries, by gnawing the tender bark from the fruit-trees, which they greedily devour. Hares are fond of every description of wild fruit and berries; and it is not until after the commencement of the frost, when all THE AMiRtCAi^ ttAilE. 591 these various productions are ripe, that they become fit for the table. In the North, they depend for support during the long winters upon the buds and bark of the pine and fir, upon which they grow fat. THEIR FLESH. The flesh of the American hare, when cooked, is dark and of a game-flavor, and, if it were not for their great abundance, would be highly esteemed as a delicacy for the table ; but, so long as they can be purchased in our markets at twelve and a half cents apiece, the public will not think a great deal of them. The hare is not in condition for the table until after several severe frosts, when the meat will be found clean, delicate, juicy, and tender, provided it is cooked in right style and with the pro- per condiments. In the summer season, hares are not fit for the table at all; their flesh at this time is tough and stringy, and, moreover, their bodies, more particularly about the head and upper part of the neck, are infested with a species of oestrus, that lays its eggs in the skin, and which, when hatched, grow sometimes to an enormous size before leaving its nest ; we have found them buried in the very flesh of the neck, as much as an inch long, and as large as the point of the little finger. Their presence must worry and torment the poor animal much, as we have always found those with these worms in them very lean, and to all appear- ance weak and sickly. We have shot them as late as November with these worms in them, but they generally fall out much earHef than this. HUNTING HARBS. ^^ NSTEAD of coursing hares as thej do in England and on the Continent, we either take them in snares and traps, or rous- ing them with a dog, shoot them as they make off. They are easily killed, and it will require but a few pellets of partridge- shot to bring a large one to bag. They possess a strong scent, and perplex the dogs very much when in pursuit of partridges : the best of dogs can hardly refrain from chasing a hare, after pointing it and seeing it jump up and make off from before his very nose. They lie very close, and it will be necessary oftentimes to kick them up from their form when the dog points them ; we have done so repeatedly. Hares affect marshy thickets, or rather the open fields adjoin- ing thickets ; as they retire to these situations for refuge as soon as roused, and in fact remain there during the greater portion of the day. They bound along with considerable speed and gen**- 392 THEAMERICAN HARE. 393 rallj iji a straight courBC, but when hard pressed resort to the artifices of doubling, — a manoeuvre practised constantly by the European variety. They will also hide themselves away in the trunk of a hollow tree, which they ascend by pressing the feet and back against opposite sides of the hollow. The kind of dogs most generally employed in the pursuit of hares in this country is a small species of beagle, the production, we believe, of a cross and recross of the fox-hound and beagle. These animals, as well as most other mongrels found on our farms, become very fond of the sport, and acquire considerable sagacity and speed in the chase. There are few dogs that live in the country but will hunt rabbits, or, more correctly speaking, hares ; some of course are far superior to others, according to their build and the intelligence bequeathed them by their ancestors. DOMESTICATED. American hares have in some few instances been domesticated, but, when confined in enclosures, are ever making efforts to escape ; they will, however, breed in warrens. THEIR CRY. " This species, like all the true hares, has no note of recognition ; and its voice is never heard, except when wounded, or at the mo- ment of its capture, when it utters a shrill, plaintive cry, like that of a young child in pain ; in the Northern hare this cry is louder, shriller, and of longer continuance." ENEMIES. It is not surprising that a timid, defenceless creature like the hare should have numerous sanguinary enemies ; and among them none are more destructive than the weasel. This formidable and courageous little animal is constantly on the look-out for hares, and, tracking them, enters the holes, hollow trees, or other places where they are secreted, and dispatches them with the greatest 394 lewis's america^^ sportsman?. ferocity. Skunks, wild cats, foxes, hawks, owls, snakes, &c. all prey upon the hare whenever they can succeed in capturing him either by pursuit, stealth, or stratagem. DIFFERENT VARIETIES. There are several varieties of hares distributed over different sections of our extensive country. Their habits are generally very analogous to those of the Lepus sylvaticus. Some varieties, however, are smaller, while others are larger; and those inhabiting the more northern latitudes change their sombre summer pelage during the winter months to a spotless white. Their flesh at the proper season is universally esteemed, and the timid creatures are consequently much persecuted by the inhabitants of the districts wherever they are found. MEMORANDA. 1. The American hare is not a rabbit, but a bona fide hare, both in appearance, flesh, and mode of life : no naturalist disputes the point. 2. Different varieties of foreign rabbits have been imported into the country from time to time ; but there is no species of rabbits a native of this continent as yet discovered. 3. American hares, like the European, live singly above ground, and never burrow ; they also breed far less often than the rabbit, and have fewer at each litter. 4. The English rabbits live in communities, and form extensive excavations in the ground, termed burrows or warrens^ where they mostly reside and deposit their young. 5. The young of the Lepus sylvaticus, as the foreign hare, are covered with hair at birth, their eyes open, and their limbs strong enough for immediate action. 6. The young of the true rabbit are quite bare of hair : when first brought forth, their eyes are closed and their limbs tender and weakly. 7. The American hare is a lonely, timid creature; the rabbit, THE AMERICAN HARE. 396 on the contrary, is a social, frolicsome, bold or rather pert little animal. 8. The hind-legs of the Lepus sylvaticus are very long, and formed like those of the European hare, and are consequenty quite different from those of the rabbit. 9. The Lepus sylvaticus, when pursued by dogs, trusts in a great measure to her speed for safety, and resorts to the same devices to insure her escape (that is, doubling) as the English variety. 10. The rabbit, on the contrary, takes to her burrow as her only safeguard. 11. The flesh of the hare, when boiled, is dark ; that of the rabbit, white 12. The hare is almost entirely a nocturnal animal ; the rabbit but little so. CHAPTER XXVL THE SQUIRREL.. « From bough to bough the scampering squirrels bound, But soon in smoky thunders bite the ground ; Life's gushing streams their sable furs defile." E hardly think it will be expected of us to include the subject of squirrel-shoot- ing in this volume ; however, as we know something about the matter, (perhap3 nothing new,) picked up during our early school-days in a great squirrel-country, it may not be amiss in us to devote a few pages to these interesting little creatures, that enliven the solitude of our deep forests with their frolicsome gambols. Our friend Porter, in his reprint of Hawker^ — by-the-by a most excellent work in itself, and made still more so by the valuable 896 THE SQUIRREL. 397 additions of the editor, — gives a most interesting account of squirrel-shooting. If all our readers would peruse the articles referred to in the above publication, they would have nothing farther to learn or. the subject, save a few hints as to the habits of the animal. VARIETIES OF SQUIRRELS. " There are no less than sixty or seventy varieties of this genus described by naturalists, of which twenty well-determined species exist in North America." HABITS, LOCALITY, AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS. The habits of the whole race of squirrels are nearly akin ; and their bodies are covered with long, soft, and beautiful fur, aLd furnished with a long, wiry, and bushy tail, which latter appendage adds greatly to their graceful appearance, as they are all alike remarkable for their sprightliness, agility, and elegance of form. Squirrels are at all times, even in a state of captivity, of a restless, active disposition. In their native wilds they are ever frolicsome and gay, jumping from tree to tree. They pass their time in joyousness and unrestrained freedom in the midst of the rich abundance of our forests. When moving on the ground, the squirrel seldom runs, but advances by a series of jumps. Tliey are of a sly, mercurial temperament, seldom remaining still for a moment, except when alarmed ; then they will stretch themselves out at full length, on the topmost brajich of a high tree, on the side opposite to the seat of danger, and thus remain perfectly motionless, as if a part or parcel of the tree itself, until the cause of the alarm has moved off. They generally build large nests formed of twigs, moss, and leaves, in the notches of the highest forest-trees, or take up their abode in hollow trunks, or burrow in the ground. The whole race of squirrels is very prolific ; and some species increase so rapidly and to such a surprising extent in certain sections of country that they actually become a severe scourge to 398 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. the farmer, who, with the assistance of all his family, is not able to protect his hard-earned crops from the depredations of these lawless little fellows, that swarm in the cornfield at such times by hundreds, and even thousands, consuming all within their reach, and destroying still more by throwing it down on the ground. When eating, or occupied in listening, they sit erect on their hind-legs, with their long, bushy tail raised beautifully along the back as far as the shoulders, then falling in a graceful curve near the extremity, and hanging towards the ground. Their food is always held in their fore-paws. The teeth of the whole race are remarkable for their sharpness, power, and durability ; they cut with ease, in an incredibly short time, through the hardest hickory-nut, and have the sagacity to tell a withered or rotten nut from a good one by the mere feel or smell ; and no sooner do they pick up one of these bad ones than they turn it round in their nimble paws and discard it. This fact we have again and again tested with the common gray squirrel. The gullet of the squirrel is said to be very small, or rather con- tracted at one point, to prevent the food from being disgorged when descending trees. We do not know if such is the fact, and we have no squirrel at hand at this present time to examine. The whole race, with one or two exceptions, inhabit the thick woods, living upon the profusion of seeds, acorns, hickory-nuts, chestnuts, and the various other products of our rich and grand forests. Several varieties of squirrels, more especially those at the North, are very provident and thoughtful of the morrow, always collecting and laying up in secret storehouses the surplus food, which they partake of during the winter season, when the nuts are all shaken by the cold blasts from the trees, and perhaps covered up a foot or more in frozen snow. These well-stocked granaries are generally in the neighborhood of their nests, either in the hollow of a tree, in the bottom of an old stump, or in the wide fissure of an overhanging rock. The quantities of nuts thus stowed away by a single squirrel is sometimes enormous. We have $een as much as a bushel of hickory-nuts, chestnuts, acorns, beech- THE SQUIRREL. 399 nuts, chincapins, &c. &c. deposited in one of these spots. The whole, however, may not have been put there by a single indi- vidual,— the stock, perhaps, having been collected together by several, who made this the general dep6t for all their contribu- tions, each one laboring for the general good, and all, in turn, entitled to a full share of the booty. Each squirrel, most commonly, has several different storehouses, to which he respect- ively resorts according to circumstances. The fact of these in- dustrious little animals providing themselves with more granaries than one for the guarding of their treasures is a striking example of that instinct which we so often see displayed in the inferior works of creation ; for their storehouses are often discovered by the keen-scented hog, and the whole devoured at a single meal ; strange squirrels, of a larger variety, will also sometimes locate themselves near one of these deposits, and not only rob it of all its provender, but even deny the anxious owner the privilege of sharing in the general division; a drift of snow, or some other mishap, will occasionally cover one up for weeks at a time. In either of such emergencies as we have described, the poor squirrel would have but a slim chance to get through the winter if he had not provided himself with other secret stores. Squirrels are all very cleanly and nice in their habits and gene- ral appearance, and are seen frequently in the course of a day rub- bing their faces with their paws, as if on purpose to wash them off. THEIR ACTIVITY AND STRENGTH. Squirrels are possessed of great muscular power, and leap with surprising agility and precision from tree to tree ; and, when hotly pursued and unable to reach the adjoining tree so as to effect their escape, will not hesitate to drop themselves from tremendous heights to the ground, and then make off with rapid bounds to the next favorable cluster of trees that stands in their path. Audubon remarks that " the squirrel is admirably adapted to a residence on trees, for which nature has designed it. Its fingers are long, slender, and deeply cleft, and its nails very acute ai-nd 400 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. greatly compressed; it is enabled to leap from branch to branch, and from tree to tree, clinging to the smallest twigs, and seldom missing its hold. When this happens to be the case, it has an in- stinctive habit of grasping in its descent at the first object which may present itself; or, if about to fall to the earth, it spreads out in the manner of the flying squirrel, and thus, by presenting a greater resistance to the air, is enabled to reach the ground with- out injury, and recover itself so instantaneously that it often escapes the teeth of the dog that watches its descent and stands ready to seize upon it at the moment of its fall." CAPTIVITY. In captivity the most of squirrels are gay, lively, and mis- chievous ; they are easily tamed, and become very interesting pets ; the most docile, however, will bite, at times, if worried ; they are very destructive and troublesome if not perpetually confined to their boxes, as when at liberty they try their long and sharp teeth upon every thing within their reach ; no article of furniture can escape them. Squirrels, we have noticed, sleep very soundly, and are not easily aroused from their slumbers. They become attached to their keepers, and some of them will allow no other person to handle them. • They are usually high-tempered, and are easily irritated. Great alarm or sensation of pain is expressed by squirrels by a sharp, piercing cry; that of pleasure by a soft, rumbling noise, somewhat like the purring of a cat; when fretted or roused from their slumbers, they give forth a loud and angry growl. Although, in a state of nature, nuts, seeds, insects, and grain of various kinds form their principal food, they soon learn to partake of almost every thing ; several that we have had partook of bread and milk with the greatest relish. They also become quite fond of sugar and all kinds of sweets, as well as fruits of every description ; they are also very partial to locusts, which they tear to pieces and devour with the greatest zest. THE SQUIRREL. 401 When wild, squirrels are said never to resort to the streams for water, but quench their thirst by sipping the dew and rain that collects on the leaves or in the hollows of trees ; when domesti- cated, they drink freely and often : this may be occasioned by the difference in diet, as the sweets they eat in confinement will pro duce a thirst in any animal. OTHER CHARACTERISTICS. " In the spring the squirrels shed their hair, which is replaced by a thinner and less furry coat; during summer their tails are narrower and less feathery than in autumn, when they either re- ceive an entirely new coat or a very great accession of fur. At this season, also, the outer surfaces of the ears are more thickly and prominently clothed with fur than in the spring and autumn." Some species of squirrels breed twice in the course of the spring and summer months; they all have several at a litter. In the northern latitudes, where the earth is shrouded for months in a chilling mantle of snow, the various species of squirrels indigenous to these inhospitable climes retire to their secure retreats, either in the ground, or in the fissures of rocks or hollows of trees, where, surrounded by their winter store, they pass the time in a state of sluggish and benumbed existence, not very far removed from the dormancy observable in many other quadrupeds. Some varieties, to a certain extent, live in communities, more especially during the time they pass in their winter quarters. Several species have cheek-pouches, in which they can stow away an incredible quantity of nuts and seeds. ^6 402 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. THEIR ENEMIES. The wliole tribe of squirrels, like the more timid and defenceless hare, have a host of enemies constantly on the look-out to make them their prey. The fox, weasel, wild cat, and mink, are ever on the prowl, and ready to pounce upon the active little squirrel whenever they can secure him by stratagem or pursuit ; the weasel is ever on the alert, and, following his victims into their otherwise secure retreats, at- tacks them with the most sanguinary spirit, and soon dispatches the anxious parent as well as her tender and unconscious litter, impelled alone to such savage deeds by an unquenchable thirst for blood, for he seldom partakes of but a small portion of that which he so wantonly destroys. Several varieties of hawks, owls, and even snakes, capture squirrels, and prey upon their young. SQUIRREL-SHOOTINa. In sections of country where squirrels are numerous and the pur- suit of them is followed as a sport, they are killed entirely with a small-bored rifle. Our squirrel-shooters become surprisingly expert in the use of this weapon, and perform some wonderful feats with it during the squirrel season ; they always aim for the head, so as not to injure the skin, which is valuable to the furrier if not per- forated with a ball. It is seldom that they miss a squirrel, even when hiding in the topmost branches of our tallest forest-trees. In portions of country where they are not so numerous, it is necessary to repair to the woods attended with a squirrel-dog, — that is, any kind of a terrier or spaniel mongrel which has been taught ''to tree a squirrel,*' or, in other words, to rush about in the woods till he either sees a squirrel run up a tree or gets upon the fresh scent of one that has just taken to a tree. The dog stops at the foot, and, looking wistfully and knowingly up the tree, breaks forth into an incessant and musical bark that resounds through the woods and soon brings the huntsman to his side. The THE SQUIRREL. 403 next thing i« to find the squirrel, which, perhaps, is spread flat out on his belly, on one of the topmost branches of the tree, the color of his fur assimilating so closely to that of the bark that it is almost impossible to discover him. In a few moments, however, the hawk-eyed shooter catches sight of his victim as he moves for an instant to hide himself more securely from observation ; the sharp report of the rifle is immediately heard resounding afar in the distance, and down tumbles the once frolicsome little squirrel, a lifeless thing. When pursued or watched, squirrels instinctively dodge around the opposite side of the tree occupied by the sportsman, and, by perseveringly pursuing this course, will often baflle the shooter till his patience becomes entirely exhausted ; it is, therefore, always better to go in company when squirrel-shooting is the sport, so that either yourself or companion may contrive to get sight of every one that takes to a tree. BARKING SQUIRRELS. This original method of killing squirrels is pursued as a pas- time by shooters inhabiting districts of country where these ani- mals are numerous. The whole secret, or rather art, of harking squirrels, is to strike with the bullet immediately under that por- tion of the limb upon which the animal is stretched out, in such a manner that the blow will shiver the bark, and, killing the squirrel by the concussion, send it whirling in the air to the ground, " as if it had been blown up by the explosion of a powder-magazine." This is a very artistic way of killing squirrels, and many of our Pennsylvania hunters are very expert at it. The skin is not in- jured, nor the flesh torn, by this mode of shooting. FLESH. The flesh of several varieties of squirrels is most excellent. They should be voided and kept several days in cold weather. 404 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. SOIURUS MIGRATORIUS. MIGRATORY GRAY SQUIRRELS. DIMENSIONS. " An old male in winter pelage. inches, linm. Length of head and body 12 6 " tail (vertebrae) 11 0 " tail to end of hair 14 0 Height of ear 0 7 ear to end of fur 0 9 Heel to end of longest nail 2 6 Length of fur on the back 0 8 Weight 1 pound 6 ounces." — Audubon. LOCALITY. This species is the common gray squirrel of the North ; it is found in considerable abundance throughout the wild districts of the Eastern States, and is very numerous in the mountainous regions of Pennsylvania, but does not exist farther south than the northern counties of Virginia. HABITS. The gray squirrel has few characteristics different from the whole genus as before described. They are much sought after as pets by our youth, as they bear confinement with great good-humor, and soon become quite recon- ciled to a captive's life. Although mild and gentle, they are rather uncertain in their disposition, and will at times bite their keepers very severely. This species was formerly so abundant in the agricultural districts of Pennsylvania that they committed great depredations by invading the grainfields. To such an extent was this havoc carried during the period of the early settlements, that an ancient law existed, offering a reward of six cents for every squirrel destroyed; and Audubon informs us that in the year 1749 the bounty paid out of the treasury, in consequence of this THE SQUIRREL. 405 enactment, was equivalent to 640,000 squirrels. Tins circum- stance alone will prove the amazing numbers of these active little animals. Even at the present time they are quite abundant in the less-cultivated districts of Pennsylvania; and it is no uncommon thing for a shooter to bring home a dozen or so, the result of a day's ramble through the dense forests. THEIR MIGRATIONS. During some seasons, in particular localities, squirrels, more especially the Sciurus migratorius, appear to be seized with an extraordinary desire to ramble or migrate from one section of country to another. Speaking of this peculiarity on the part of this species, Audubon remarks: — "It is stimulated either by scarcity of food, or by some other inexplicable instinct, to leave its native haunts, and seek for adventures or for food in some, to it, unexplored portion of our land." At such times they collect together in multitudes and move off in immense droves ; nothing can stop them in their onward progress, and they never hesitate to swim the widest rivers which intercept their march. Great numbers are necessarily drowned in these bold undertakings, as well as destroyed by their enemies. The circumstance of squirrels crossing rivers during their migration proves the indomitable energy of character that these active little creatures possess, as they are not at all partial to water in any form, and always keep within-doors during a storm ; and, if they should accidentally wet or even soil their feet, they immediately stop to dry them by passing them through their bushy tails several times. Godman remarks on this subject: — "While travelling through the State of Ohio, in the autumn of 1822, we had an opportunity Df witnessing something of this sort. Parts of the country ap- peared to swarm with squirrels, which were so numerous that, in travelling along the highroad, they might be seen scampering in every direction ; the woods and fields might be truly said, in the country-phrase, to be * alive with them.* A farmer who had a 400 Lewis's American sportsman. large field of Indian corn near the road informed us that, notwith- standing the continued exertions of himself and his two sons, he feared he should lose the greater part of his crop, in addition to his time and the expense of ammunition used in killing and scaring oiF the little robbers. This man and his sons frequently took stations in different parts of the field, and killed squirrels until their guns became too dirty longer to be used with safety ; yet they always found on returning that the squirrels had mustered as strongly as before." The following extract, taken from Porter, will also give a good idea of their numbers in Pennsylvania during a season of plenty : — "These pleasant little fellows are at some seasons as scarce as specie ; at other times they migrate in millions. A few seasons since, they pervaded the northern part of Pennsylvania to such an extent, and in such numbers, that they did serious injury to the crops ; and they were slaughtered as enemies, — not popped over humanely after the manner in which we murder those we love. The squirrels were followed in due time by stately droves of turkeys ; and, later in the season, the rear was brought up by scores of very serious half-famished-looking bears. A war of extermination was declared against the squirrels; and I am sorry to say that many overt acts of violence and bloodshed towards them preceded the formal declaration of hostility. A party of twenty-four, twelve on either side, all expert with the rifle, made a day's hunt, from sunrise to sunset, — the vanquished (that is, whichever side shot the fewer number of squirrels) to pay the forfeit of the best supper the town would afford, for all concerned ; and they slaugh- tered fifteen hundred and sixty-eight ! merely carrying the scalps to count with. A few days afterwards, a party of the same num- ber went out, anxious to rival or eclipse the trophies of the first day, after having prepared themselves well, with clean guns, rifles of course, and all munition of war, their sights better regulated and their barrels better browned than those of the party who reaped the first day's victory ; and they brought in eighteen hundred and nineteen ! making about seventy-five apiece. One THE SQUIRREL. 407 of the party in the last day's hunt shot one hundred and thirty- six, and that under unfavorable circumstances, being delayed three hours, during the day, in getting a bullet up which he could not ram down." Further on the writer remarks again : — " We killed thirteen off one hickory-tree ; and they were busily coming and going to and from it all the time, perfectly regardless of what was going on. All this immense importation of squirrels were either gray or black, and not one single fox-squirrel (which is common in Eastern Penn- sylvania) was to be seen. During the whole afternoon it was nothing but loading and firing, until our rifle-barrels became so hot that we had to lay them down occasionally to cool. The myriads of squirrels that are to be found on a few acres of favorable feed- ing-ground during the season of plenty is almost incredible to those who have never witnessed it. All the wholesale slaughter that was made during the season did not sensibly diminish their numbers; for the rear of their countless army poured in and filled up the places of the slain faster than were closed the thinned ranks of Napoleon on the field of Waterloo." CHAPTER XXVII. MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. mM USE OF GLOVES. LL sportsmen whose occupation or pro- fession makes it desirable that they should have white and smooth hands (and there are but few gentlemen whose employments do not require this) ought, ex necessitate rerum, to wear gloves when shooting, as nothing, to our eyes, looks more outre, if not vulgar, than a coarse, scratched, and scarred hand. Not only from time im- memorial with the polished communities of the Old World, but even among the half-civilized inhabitants of other less-favored climes, a small, smooth, and delicate hand was, and is even at the present day, considered a special sign of nobility, or, at all events, re- garded as one of the most striking features or tests of gentle breeding, education, and refinement. This feeling, to a certain extent, exists even in our country ; and every intelligent sportsman, therefore, will understand our motives for calling his attention 408 MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 409 to what may be considered, by the mass, a very trite and silly matter. However, no one, we imagine, even among this class of fault-finders, independently of the mere looks of the thing, could offer any particular objection to the protecting of his hands from the rude contact of the piercing thorns and poisonous briers that overrun our forests. Old, half-worn kid gloves, that fit snugly but do not bind the hand, are the kind best adapted to this purpose. If the covering on the dexter-finger should interfere with the delicacy of touch so necessary for pulling the trigger, a portion of it should be removed. It will also be necessary oftentimes to relieve the stricture of the other fingers by making incisions lengthwise into the gloves. GRASPING THE BARREL. Guns are now made so light, and withal so beautifully balanced, that there no longer remains any necessity, when presenting the piece, of stretching the left hand up the barrel to the extreme point of the stock ; but it should father be grasped close to the guard, so that the hand may be protected as much as possible, in the event of its bursting, from some of those untoward accidents which occasionally occur even in the hands of the most skilful. This mode of holding the gun was adopted some few years back by English sportsmen, on account of the frequency of such accidents, owing entirely to the inferior manufacture of the barrels for small- arms. The bursting of barrels in England, however, at the present time, is a very unusual occurrence, owing to the improvements in the arts, or perhaps more to the enactments of Parliament regu- lating these things ; still, there are a great many worthless instru- ments imported into this country from abroad, which are constantly falling into the hands of every schoolboy, whose first lesson, there- fore, in the use of the gun, should be the proper mode of present- ing it, as there is no doubt but the hand is far more secure in this position than in any other. We have heard of several guns burst- ing during the last year or two, more particularly during the reed- bird season, and several of the parties escaped without the slightest 410 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. injury, owing to this manner of holding the piece. If the hand, however, had been extended along the whole length of the stock, as formerly was the practice, we are satisfied, from actual examina- tion of the shattered weapons, two or three of them would have lost nearly the whole hand, and some of them perhaps have died of tetanus, brought on by the severity of their wounds. This plan of holding the gun cannot be so easily adopted by duck-shooters, as the length and weight of the barrels preclude the feasibility of rightly balancing the piece with the proper degree of steadiness without extending the hand farther along the barrel than the point of the guard. This is rather unfortunate, as we know of no kind of shooting in our country that is attended with so many distressing accidents as the pursuit of wild fowl ; and the most of these casualties arise from this one circumstance, — the bursting of the barrels, owing to heavy charging. We would therefore caution our friends against the use of a common duck-gun, and would also advise them to be particular in loading, as well as in keeping their person out of the bursting-range of a suspicious weapon in the hands of some one of their more reckless companions, who perhaps prides himself on being knocked over at every discharge of his piece. If the gun is not already too heavy for comfort, it may be rendered more manageable by loading the butt with metal, so as to make it balance in the hands with more ease. COCKING THE GUN. In most kinds of shooting we are in favor of carrying the gun cocked in preference to half-cocked, for the following reasons : — In partridge-shooting, as before stated, the most of our hunting is done in the thick coverts, and when the birds are scattered about it is impossible to tell where or when they will get up, as the dog is lost to view one-half of his time, and the first intimation we have of his position, although within a few rods of us, is the whirring of a bird from under our very nose, and of which we only catch a glimpse in the distance as it rushes through the thick foliage or MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 411 hanging vines. This opportune moment must be instantly caught at by the sportsman, or the game escapes ; and we are convinced that no one, no matter how expert or ready he may be, can find sufficient time to cock his gun and fire in this short space of time. In snipe and woodcock-shooting it is also better to carry the gun cocked, as the game is so uncertain in its movements. And on the score of prudence, we would apprehend more danger from a com- panion cocking his gun on the springing of a bird behind him than if he were to have the piece already prepared to fire, as in the hurry and excitement of the moment he might not pull the cock sufficiently far back to make it catch the tumbler, and the conse- quence of this omission would be the discharge of the piece on a level with one's head, or perhaps the death of a valuable dog. The gun, however, as before stated, should always be held in such a position that, no matter when or how exploded, its contents can do no mischief save the killing of a bird ; and we would be loath to shoot in company a second time with any one who seemed thoughtless or hardy upon this subject, as life is too precious to be placed in jeopardy on every shooting-excursion. WADDING. Patent wadding, or rather patent wads, have come so generally into use, and are so well known to all our shooters, that it would seem a waste of time to say any thing on the subject. These wads are made of a species of thick, elastic, porous pasteboard, and are numbered from one to twenty, so as to fit the bore of every de- scription of gun. They are put up in boxes of from one hundred to three hundred, and are very convenient, compact, and serviceable. Those living at a distance from the city had better always be provided with a "punch" for cutting wads, so that in case of need, or for economy's sake, they can be cut out of an old hat or stiff pasteboard or leather. If the "punch" be of good metal, a thick, heavy piece of lead with a smooth surface can be used to cut the waddings on, without injury to the instrument ; a piece of hard-grained wood, however, 412 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. will answer the same purpose, and perhaps be more easily ob- tained. The wadding over the powder should be forced down with con- siderably more violence than the one placed over the shot, so as to drive the powder into the chambers and nipple-hole and mould it into a compact form. If the wadding over the shot be forced down too hard, there will be a considerable recoil when the piece is dis- charged ; this of itself will soon teach the novice better. ONE BARREL USED MORE THAN THE OTHER. The right barrel, in the hands of all sportsmen, is used more frequently than the left, and consequently in old guns is generally found to be far thinner than the left. This habit ought to be avoided as much as possible, and the novice should accustom him- self to pull the trigger of the left-hand barrel with the same facility that he doas the right. MlSCELLAiSEOUS HINTS. 413 SPORTING-KNIFE. There is nothing, at times, more useful than a sporting-knife, which comprises all the requisites for probing, examining locks, dividing luncheon, &c. &c. The knife should not be too large or complicated, but only contain those instruments which may at some time or another prove useful ; for instance, it should not be defi- cient in a probe, a pivot-picker, a nipple-wrench, a turn-screw, a fleam for bleeding dogs, and one, perhaps, for horses also, as this noble animal is so frequently a necessary accompaniment to a shooting-trip that we should be provided with means to preserve his well-being in case of need ; for instance, if he should be at- tacked with a fit of blind staggers, or any other affection requiring bleeding. Such knives can be obtained at the gunsmiths' or fancy sporting stores, and should be as plain as possible in its appearance, and valuable for its intrinsic worth. If one-half or two-thirds of the price of the instrument is expended upon the finishing and carving of the handle or other fancy work, we cannot expect to find good metal in the blades. CARRYING GAME. The old-fashioned, cumbersome game-bag is now entirely out of use, and all kinds of game are carried in pockets appropriated to that purpose in the shooting-coat, of which we will speak more particularly under another head. Before putting birds in the pocket, their feathers should be smoothed down ; and, if the sportsman takes pride in the appear- ance of his game, the blood ought to be wiped from their plumnge before it becomes hard and congealed. GUNNING-CLOTHES. Fustian undoubtedly makes the most serviceable coat for field- shooting in these latitudes, and, although entirely of cotton fabric, 414 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. is quite warm enough for all kinds of sport, even in the coldest weather, provided we are in motion. A coat made of this material is rather warm and heavy for late snipe-shooting or cock-shooting, as the texture of the cloth is so rery close that it will hardly permit of the passage of the insen- sible perspiration from the body. For this latter kind of work we prefer a brown linen coat. A fustian coat has an important advantage over all kinds of woollen articles, that it does not offer a harbor for moths during the idle season; and, moreover, having very little or no nap, it neither catches the briers so easily nor gets torn by the twigs or thorns. We never had but one woollen shooting-coat ; and that was fairly torn to pieces in one season, and the remnants eaten up the follow- ing summer by the moths. The pants and vest should all be made of the same material, and have a sufficient quantity of pockets for all purposes. Our suit contains sixteen pockets, and we find them all more or less useful. The cap had likewise better be made of fustian : it will prove warm, strong, and in a measure water-proof; it should have a large front to protect the eyes, and a back to put down at pleasure, to turn the rain off from the neck and shoulders. A cap made after this style is called by the cap-makers the Napoleon cap. The cap we use has no lining in it, and we find it quite warm enough without it for most kinds of shooting; if the weather, however, is very cold and boisterous during wild-fowl shooting, we place a quilted lining in the crown, which makes it as comfortable as need be. The fustian coat will not answer for wild-f«wl shoot- ing, as it is not sufficiently warm. Nothing but wool will do for this purpose, — to preserve which, in the summer season, from the annoying attacks of the moths, is no small affair ; however, we will try to put our readers in a way effectually to defy the efforts of these little torments. A bag sufficiently large to hold all the woollen shooting-clothes MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 415 should be mme of strong linen, and, before putting the clothing in it, it should be wrung out of turpentine and hung up to dry. The clothes, after being well beaten and brushed, are put into this bag with pieces of camphor distributed in the pockets. The bag is then sewed up and put away in some dark hole, and not opened until the return of the ducking-season, when all will be found right. Without this precaution, a whole suit will be riddled by these vora- cious little torments in the course of one summer. Fustian, as before said, being manufactured entirely of cotton, is, of course, not liable to the attacks of moths. IMPORTANCE OF CLEAN GUNS. Sportsmen cannot be too particular in cleaning their guns, so as to prevent the accumulation of any thing like rust. It would seem almost absurd for us to advise our readers never to put their arms away without washing them out thoroughly and rubbing them per- fectly dry with a good supply of that very essential article vulgarly termed "elbow-grease." Nevertheless, this recommendation is a necessary precaution, as we were informed, a few days since, that one of our oldest and most experienced sporting friends is in the habit of laying his gun by at the conclusion of each shooting- season without even so much as swabbing it out ; and, to make the matter still worse, he strongly recommends and insists upon this 416 LEWIS S AMERICAN SPOKTSMAN. course as the proper plan to prevent the engendering of rust. Whether or not he also advised the standing of the barrels in a damp cellar for a month or so, we did not ascertain, but might be led to infer that he could not certainly object to this addition. When a barrel is fired, the metal of course becomes heated, and the natural consequence of the application of this heat is a rapid condensation and accumulation of moisture upon the inside of the barrel, — the same as we often see collected upon the window-panes of our houses on a cool November morning. This fact may be clearly ascertained, if any one of my readers doubts the assertion, by merely thrusting the little finger into the muzzle a minute or two after firing, when it will be found that the inside of the gun is covered with a certain degree of dampness which increases the farther we go down the barrel. This moisture, in connection with some of the ingredients used in the manufacture of powder, soon creates a deposition of rust of a most corrosive character, which, if allowed to remain for several weeks, will materially injure the weapon. When a rust-spot or flaw is once made on the inside of a barrel, it is very difficult to be got at; and even after the most cautious cleaning a small particle of moisture will be found cling- ing to its uneven surface, which will continue to corrode the barrel at this point, until at last a hole is actually eaten through, pro- vided the gun does not burst before this takes place. A rust-flaw upon a fine sword-blade is a most difficult thing to get rid of, although easily got at, and will often defy the rubbing and polish- ing of the most persevering amateur. Some shooters are in the habit of putting their guns away loaded and letting them remain in this condition for weeks at a time, and then fearlessly firing them off", little dreaming of the danger they run by this piece of negligence, owing to the accu- mulation of rust around the powder and along the barrel. That the corrosive action of rust is the frequent cause of those terrible accidents that often occur among ignorant and careless shooters no one will for a moment question; and all have noticed that the MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 417 bursting of guns is far more frequent with those who reside in the neighborhood of the sea-shore than in any other part of the coun- try, owing in a great measure to the fact that the salt moisture of the atmosphere produces rust with so. much rapidity that it is almost impossible to keep the barrels clear of it, even with the most persevering industry. Of this, however, we will speak more fully under another head. We are astonished that any sensible sportsman could for a mo- ment entertain or endeavor to promulgate such a ridiculous notion a8 putting away a gun dirty to preserve it from rust ! In fact, we cannot understand his motive or conjure up one single good reason for so doing ; but, on the other hand, we are satisfied that such a course would be attended with the most injurious results. SHOOTING-BOOTS. How frequently have we seen one of our sporting friends vic- timized during a whole day's shooting by the tortures of a pair of badly-made and ill-constructed boots ! and how often have we sympathized with him in his misfortunes, as well as laughed at his negligence in being caught in such an unsportsmanlike predicament. Nothing adds more to the comfort and good-humor of a sports- man than a perfectly-fitting and well-modelled boot, and nothing is more easily obtained if recourse is had to a smart workman. If walking-boots are not made full, large, and easy, no comfort can be expected from them, as they will be sure either to cramp the feet, pinch the toes, gall the heel, skin the instep, or arrest the free circulation of the blood and fatigue the wearer almost to death. It is of no use, certainly, to enumerate any more of the miseries attending a pair of bad-fitting shooting-boots, as many of our readers no doubt, some time in the course of their lives, have had a practical demonstration of the matter, and perhaps can speak more feelingly on the subject than we can, as we have always been very particular in the choice of these articles, and consequently have seldom been caught in the unfortunate situation above alluded to. There are, however, some other objections attending the own- 27 418 ership of a pair of tight boots, particularly when damp ; that is, they are very inconvenient to get on, and, we might say, still worse to pull off. And, moreover, nothing injures the stiffening of the heels so much, and makes them perfectly good-for-nothing, as tugging at them with a bootjack or working into them with the toe of the other foot or over the cross-bar of a chair: the stiff sole leather with which the heel is braced becomes perfectly soft, and consequently will be sure to run over on the next trial. What is more ludicrous than to see a bad-tempered man, half bent, danc- ing and prancing over a small bar-room, with one foot in a slipper and the other, stuck fast half-way down a tight boot, striving in vain with all the energies of his body to force it on ? Such scenes are not uncommon among sportsmen, and often give rise to much merriment on the part of the " knowing ones." That a tight boot is very uncomfortable, no one will deny ; and a boot made too large for the foot has likewise its inconveniences, as it will be sure to ride up and down on the heel, and sooner or later will rub the foot into blisters of the most painful character. There is a happy medium between these two evils of loose and tight boots, which every intelligent mechanic knows how to arrive at without any directions from the sportsman; "in a word, the boot should be made to fit the foot, and not the foot to fit the boot," as is too often the case. Shooting-boots should be made of stout calfskin of the very best quality, with broad soles, square toes, wide, deep, and low heels. If the heels be made too narrow and high, the stiffening will soon give way when softened by the long application of mud and water, in connection with the pressure of the heel of the foot, which will soon be carried entirely over the frame of the sole ; and we know of nothing more uncomfortable and fatiguing than to be forced to walk all day long with a "run-over boot." This accident, bad as it is, can hardly be prevented with any degree of caution In snipe-shooting, as the stiffening of the heel becomes so very soft ^hile wading about in the mud and mire, and the walking is so very uneven, that the heel almost invariably pushes itself by de- MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 419 grees entirely over the frame, and we have abandoned all hope of ever having a decent-looking pair of boots for this kind of shoot- ing. When, however, they have run over, they may be braced up with pieces of sole-leather, and the heel itself slightly raised on the same side, so as to throw the weight of the foot in the opposite direction; in this way they will stand a great deal of hard work, and, with a little management, can be made to last a long while. We have been so much annoyed with our hoots running over while snipe-shooting, that we proposed to our bootmaker to put in a metallic plate of some kind between the layers of leather usually employed for making this portion of the boot firm and unyielding to the pressure of wet and irregular walking ; but he made so many objections to our proposition that we were forced to abandon the idea for the present. However, we intend to investigate the sub- ject at some future time. Some sportsmen recommend the use of low, laced boots for snipe-shooting, as they say it is impossible to keep your feet ^ry, no matter how careful you may be, and therefore it is much better not to worry yourself with long and heavy boots, warranted to be water-proof. We have tried both water-proof boots and non-water- proof bootees, and have at times been as much disgusted with one as the other, — giving the preference now to one and now to the other, — until we have at last nearly come to the conclusion that an old pair of easy walking-boots, with holes in them to let the water run out as fast as it flows in, is about as comfortable a kind of boot for snipe-shooting as one can wear, as the feet will get wet at all hazards, — at least our feet will ; for if the boots be made high, even to reach far above the knees, we are sure, some time in the course of the day, to get into a ditch perhaps up to our middle ; and as often as we have gone out with the determination of not getting our feet wet, just so often have we returned home with them soak- ing, and many a pang of rheumatism have we suffered in conse- quence of our want of care. We do not pretend to say that boots cannot be rendered water-proof, for we know to the contrary, and purpose giving some receipts for making even ordinary leather im- 420 pervious to water ; but we wish to say that, so far as we are con- cerned, we have never yet been snipe-shooting without wetting oui feet; but, at the same time, must confess that we are not easily deterred from crossing a ditch, and neither are we a very expert hand at walking a rickety fence-rail or a slippery log. Shooting-boots should never be made too heavy : it is a mistaken idea to have them made of the stoutest leather and with the heaviest soles, weighing perhaps several pounds apiece, inde- pendently of the mud which generally adheres to them. A pair of boots of this description, hanging like lumps of lead to one's feet, will tire and wear out any sportsman, no matter how lusty he may be, in just half the time that would have been the case if he had used a pair of strong and light boots. Some of our sporting friends, however, who are as averse to getting their feet wet as a cat is to moistening her paws, insist upon water-proof boots with leggins of India-rubber cloth attached to the tops of them and made to fasten half-way up the leg. This plan, with some caution in picking out our way over the ditches and mud-holes, will, no doubt, succeed very well; but when we follow snipe we seldom have either the patience or time to hunt up good crossings or sound every quagmire for a firm footing, and therefore take it pretty much rough-and-tumble, just as it comes. We have tried laced boots, but have discarded them entirely, as we dislike to have our legs exposed by rolling our pants up, and "we have an equal aversion to have them dangling muddy and wet around our feet; we have, however, never made use of leggins, recommended in connection with laced boots for this kind of shoot- ing; they, doubtless, would answer a very good purpose. MISCULLAKEOUS HINTS. 421 DRESSING FOR SHOOTING-BOOTS. There are a great variety of receipts for making mixtures calcu- lated to render boots water-proof; we will give some of them for what they are worth, leaving our friends to make a more thorough trial of their qualities than we have had an inclination to do as yet, for we have never been over-anxious to preserve our feet dry, and, when we did think worth while to make the effort, we have seldom found any preparations much superior to a good greasing with dubbing the night before going out, and stopping up the seams with a mixture of beeswax and grease melted slowly over the fire, or, if these ingredients are not at hand, the free use of a tallow can- dle at the moment of going out for the day, will generally answer the same purpose. Porter's edition of Hawker furnishes us with much information on this subject ; and we should pass the matter over without any further notice, if we were sure all our readers had provided them- selves with this valuable work ; in fact, we might with perfect justice to ourselves omit this subject as well as many others without a single comment, as they have already been largely dwelt upon in Hawker : and if a sportsman should read our unpretending volume without providing himself with the other far more valuable work, he does not deserve to be well posted up in sporting-affairs, as Hawker is considered the prince of sportsmen in England, and his editor, Por- ter, is too well known in this country to need any puffing from us. The best kind of grease for dressing boots is shoemakers* dubbing. We have used it for years in preference to all other mixtures : it repels the water, and keeps the leather soft and pliable. The boots should always be moistened before applying it, and it should not be put on too frequently, or the leather may be rendered too porous. Before grease of any kind is applied to boots, they should be rubbed quite clean and the hard mud taken from the seams ; otherwise the leather, as well as the thread, will rot much faster and the boots repel the water far less than if they were perfectly clean when the grease is put on. 422 RECEIPT. Drying oil, (linseed, we presume,) one pint; Yellow wax, two ounces ; Turpentine, two ounces ; Burgundy pitch, one ounce. Melt these over a slow fire, and then add a few drachms of essen- tial oil of lavender, or thyme ; with this your boots are to be rubbed with a brush, either in the sun or at some distance from the fire. The application must be repeated as often as the boots become dry again, until they are fully saturated. — Hawker. This mixture is an excellent dressing for boots generally; it will not render them water-proof, but it will cause them to repel the rain extremely well. An excellent dressing for shooting-boots, or any thing else that is exposed to foul weather, is a solution of gum caoutchouc, or India-rubber, as it is commonly called, in strong spirits of turpen- tine or ether. It is made as follows : — A piece of caoutchouc, the size of a walnut, is cut into small pieces and put into a wide- mouthed phial, with four ounces of turpentine or ether, and allowed to remain two or three weeks, according to the strength of the solvent, when it will become of the consistence of a thick varnish, and may be applied with a brush to every part of the boot, inside as well as outside. If ether is employed to dissolve it, it will require but a very short time to make this preparation. The phial should be tightly corked; otherwise the ether will lose all its strength, or, in other words, evaporate. This preparation, or one analogous to it, is the article sold for several years past as an application to old harness and wagon-covers, to make them flexible and water-proof. Our friend Mr. Chandler sent us a quantity of water-proof dressing for boots, which we used on several occasions, and found to answer a most excellent purpose, so much so that we requested nim to furnish us with a receipt for making it, which he very kindly did, as will be seen from the following note : — MtSCIJLLANEOtTS HlJ^tS. 423 " Dear Doctor : — I have had such an excellent opportunity foi testing the good qualities of my water-proof preparation during a late shooting-excursion, that I can recommend it still more highly than before. " The composition is as follows : — One-quarter of a pound of gum elastic, (caoutchouc,) with suflSicient naphtha, oil of sassafras, seneka, or any other solvent, to completely liquefy it ; after this is effected, a pound of tallow and three-quarters of a pound of beeswax should be melted together, and in connection with the dissolved gum should be kept over a slow fire until they are inti- mately commingled. When using the preparation, the boots should be slightly wet and warmed: if the mixture is then properly rubbed in, it is almost impossible for the water to penetrate. In addition to this, I generally have the soles of my boots soaked in copal varnish. "This preparation, when used for common walking-boots or shoes, does not prevent a proper gloss being produced by blacking. I shall be glad if tifis is of any service to you, and am confident that it needs but a single trial to convince of its great eflficacy. "Very truly, yours, M. T. W. Chandler." Another : — "For new boots, half a pound of beeswax, one-quarter pound of resin, and the like quantity of mutton-suet or tallow ; boil them together, and anoint the boots well with the preparation lukewarm. If the boots have been used, beef-suet to be substituted instead of mutton." Mr. Chandler informs me that he has his shooting-boots made straights, — that is, not right and left, — and finds that they wear longer, and are far less liable to run over, as they can be changed from one foot to the other as soon as they show a disposition to run either to the right or left. The idea is an excellent one ; and we are somewhat surprised that it never occurred to us, more especially as we have had so much trouble with our boots in this very particular. 4:24 LEWISES AMIiitiCAN SPORTSMAlf. Another : — " A pint of boiled neatsfoot-oil ; Half a pound of mutton-suet; Six ounces of beeswax ; Four ounces of resin. ** These ingredients are to be melted together over a slow firo and then freely applied to every portion of the boots, after warm- ing at the fire; this dressing is especially adapted to new leather," Another : — " A pint of boiled linseed oil ; Beeswax, one ounce; Burgundy pitch, half an ounce ; Spirit of turpentine, two ounces. " Melt the first three ingredients in an earthen pot, then add the turpentine; to be rubbed in when the leather is tolerably dry, before the fire." MlSCELLAl^EOtJS HI^TS. 425 SHOOTING-STOCKINGS. Woollen stockings are preferable for walking to any other kind. They should be regular made^ — that is, woven without any seam ; for, if they be joined together at their heels or toes with a needle, the irregularities of the seam are very apt to rub the parts and pro- duce considerable uneasiness, and often blisters. Do not suppose that any common-made stockings, such as can be bought for a few pennies the pair, will answer every purpose and may then be thrown away at the termination of the trip. The plan, in the first place, is not an economical one, neither is it a convenient one ; for with the addition of a few more pennies an excellent article, that would last a whole season, might be obtained, and, by always having them on hand, we would not, as is often the case when the stockings are thrown away, find our sporting-wardrobe partially, if not en- tirely, deficient of these essentials just on the point of starting. These low-priced common stockings are never regular made, but are sewed together at the seams; they are also badly shaped, particularly at the heels, and generally uncomfortable to walk in, as well as very rotten, and in every respect unserviceable to a sportsman. We are now using stockings sent to us by a friend from England, and said to be unversally used there for ordinary shooting : the soles, toes, and heels, are made of fine wool, the other parts of the stocking being formed of soft and stout cotton. We have given several pairs of these stockings very hard ser- vice, and find them to answer admirably ; in mild weather they certainly are preferable to stockings made wholly of wool, as they heat the feet less, absorb far less water, and get dry much sooner. If our shooting-boots be too large, the diflficulty will often be removed by wearing two pairs of stockings, CLEANING GUNS. The process of cleaning a gun, although simple in itself, is not, however, thoroughly understood, much less practised, by many of 426 LEWISES AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. our sporting friends, as we have too often observed when on shoot ing-excursions. Not a few of them spend half an hour or more over their guns, rubbing and squirting dirty water about, when the whole might be completed in a few minutes if a certain system waa adopted. Our method for this important duty towards our fowl- ing-piece is as follows : — The barrels are first to be removed from the stock ; the leading to be loosened by the brisk friction of the wire-brush before spoken of. Cold water is now to be poured into the barrels, and the rod, with the patent wiper attached to it, is to be used briskly for a few minutes in thoroughly rubbing the barrels. This done to our satisfaction, rinse the barrels several times with cold water ; then pour into them boiling hot water, being provided with a heavy cloth of some kind to grasp the barrel with, otherwise the hands may be blistered, as the metal soon becomes extremely hot from the applieation of the water ; make lively use of the rod for a few moments, then rinse out with boiling water, wipe the barrels off as dry as possible, and place the muzzle downwards before the fire to dry. A little olive-oil or other fresh grease may afterwards be used on the barrels to preserve their polish and keep from rusting. All this may be accomplished in a very few minutes, certainly not exceeding fifteen. If hot water be used first, in place of cold, the powder adhering to the barrels will become soft and form itself into a kind of oake, which will be far more difficult to remove; therefore we particularly recommend the employment of the cold first and the hot afterwards. If the gun is to be put away, not to be used for some time, a little more caution will be necessary in wiping the barrels perfectly dry, to prevent rust as well as preserve their polish. This will require considerable friction with a piece of flannel or other woollen cloth. LEADING OF BARRELS. The leading of a gun is occasioned by the melting of the shot and the adhering of particles of the fused metal to the inside of the barrels. Perfect or smooth barrels are far less liable to lead MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 427 than those which are rough and uneven in their surface. If a gun leads quickly and a great deal, it is certain evidence that it is im- perfect in its bore, and will give the sportsman much trouble ia rapid shooting, owing to the difficulty of loading his piece. The wire brush we have before spoken of is an excellent instru- ment with which to free the barrels of the leading, and is the only one that will do it effectually ; even washing will not relieve the barrels when they are very rough, as common guns generally are. TO PREVENT RUSTING. A great many different modes have been resorted to to preserve gun-barrels free from rust when laid aside for a season, more par- ticularly by gunners living near the sea-shore, where the atmosphere at all times is strongly tainted with the oxidizing components. In our climate, under ordinary circumstances, remote from the sea- shore, there is little danger of rust collecting on the barrels in sufficient quantities to be of any particular injury to the metal, if proper care be taken to clean and oil them before putting away. The barrels should be rubbed perfectly dry inside and outside, and, as has been recommended by Blain, a piece of iron a little smaller in diameter than the bore of the piece may be heated to a frac- tion short of red-heat, and by means of a string let down into the barrels and moved up and down two or three times, so as effec- tually to dispel every particle of moisture that may be lingering m the interior of the gun. This being accomplished to our satisfaction, the fowling-piece may be oiled very slightly, inside and outside, and the muzzles stopped up with a woollen cloth. Neatsfoot-oil is esteemed the best kind for this purpose. There should not, of course, be a particle of salt in the grease which is used to protect metal of any descrip- 428 LISWIS^S AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. tion from rust, for reasons before stated. The nipples should be covered with a particle of shoemakers^ wax, or caoutchouc. This done, the gun is now to be laid away in a dry place ; otherwise all our preventive treatment will prove abortive. It will be prudent to examine our guns from time to time when not in constant use, and rub them off occasionally with a linen cloth and a little oil. If, however, the reader should reside near the sea-shore, it will be necessary to use some further precautions to protect his fowling- piece during the idle season ; and we know of no better plan than melting pure mutton-suet and filling the barrels with it, and also giving the outside a coating of the same, which may be easily done by pouring or smearing it over the gun when in a semi-liquid state ; this plan, to-be-sure, is not a very nice one, but nevertheless it is a very effectual one. Another plan, and perhaps a more acceptable method to many, is to give the barrels a light coating of simple varnish, which will protect them equally well from the action of the air. If, however, the operation of filling the barrels with mutton-suet be not convenient or agreeable, they may be oiled, and filled with a rod covered over with a woollen cloth of some kind and made so as to exactly fill the calibre of the gun and by this means exclude every particle of air from them. The breeches should be removed for examination, and oiled before being put away. Neatsfoot-oil is the only kind of oil admissible for these purposes. This unguent, however, is hardly pure or thin enough to be put on the machinery of the lock. We have been using latterly, as a gene- ral lubricating oil, a very beautiful French preparation by Adolphe Millochau. It is put up in small bottles of an ounce or less, and labelled "huile pour les armuriers," and can be purchased at most of the sporting stores on Broadway for a mere trifle. Mercurial ointment is highly recommended by Hawker for duck-guns, as also the following compound, taken from Daniels' Mural Sports. We have tried both, and found them equally efficacious in preventing rust. MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 429 RECEIPT. Three ounces of blacklead, half a pound of hogs' lard, one- quarter of an ounce of camphor, boiled upon a slow fire ; the gun- barrels to be rubbed with this, and, after three days, wiped off with a linen cloth. Twice in a winter will keep off the rust, which the salt water is otherwise sure to be continually bringing out from the iron. In spite, however, of all these precautions, but more frequently owing to the negligence of the sportsman, rust will sometimes accu- mulate on the surface as well as the interior of the barrels, which not only renders them unsightly, but is really very detrimental to the metal ; therefore we are constrained to give in this place some instructions for the removal of this troublesome deposit and the restoration of the barrels to their original beauty. THE SHAPE OF THE GUN-STOCK. Until within a few years the gun-stock was made rather short, with a considerable bend or curvature in it ; now we have gone to the other extreme, and every one is striving for a long and straight stock. This general desire for long stocks is not altogether judi- cious or reasonable, for what suits one sportsman in this respect will not necessarily suit all; but, on the other hand, each one should be guided by the "peculiar build of his own person" when ordering a gun stocked. To exemplify what we mean, we may here state that the gun- smiths of England have arrived at such perfection in their pro- fession that they actually measure their customers with as much precision as a flash tailor does a dandy, for the purpose of ascer- taining the style of stock best suited to their handling : the length of the arms, neck, height, and general carriage of the body, are all noted, and the stock is made in accordance with the measure- ment. A clever gunsmith, who understands his business thoroughly, will also observe his customer's mode of raising and presenting the gun, his manner of holding his head while taking aim, and many 430 LEWISES AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. other little indescribable etceteras which are always overlooked by a common workman, but which are sources of much information to a shrewd mechanic. All sportsmen know the advantage of using a gun that " comes up to the shoulder right;" they also know the inconvenience as well as difficulty of shooting with a weapon the stock of which is formed differently from that which they have been accustomed to use. It is natural to conclude that a tall, long-limbed man will require a longer stock than a shorter person ; also that a straight stock will answer better for a short-necked, high-shouldered man than for a long-necked, low-shouldered person. A stock rather long is decidedly better than one too short, and we would prefer a stock rather crooked to one too straight. A straight stock is much more suitable than a bent one for a short-necked, high-shouldered person, for the simple reason that, in fast shooting, the point of sight at the end of the gun would come up to the range of the eye before the butt could be placed full against the shoulder, and the consequence would be that the piece, not being held firmly against the body, would recoil unpleasantly at every discharge. Moreover, the gun not being held on a perfect level, but the point of the muzzle actually higher than the stock, the consequence will be that the load will be likely to be carried over the object. All this can be fully ascertained by a few trials ; and, moreover, that with an over-straight stoc*k it will be difficult to bring the head down to its proper level, even in deliberate shooting. The fashion of having the stocks made straight and rather short is very much in opposition to the most determined efforts at good shooting on the part of sportsmen generally, and we beg to warn our friends against this error ; they may rely upon our experience in this particular, as we have given the subject much attention, and are thoroughly convinced that reasonably high-mounted guns are far preferable to the "low-mounted." By the term high-mounted we mean those guns which have long MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 431 and considerably-bent stocks; by low-mounted we designate those pieces that have short and straight stocks. Every sportsman, before deciding definitely upon the purchase of a gun, should, if possible, give the weapon a fair trial, which can be done very easily by firing at a mark, — not only to ascertain the force with which the barrels shoot, but more particularly to satisfy himself as to the mounting, as above explained. If, for example, the shooter looks steadily at some object placed at a convenient distance from him, and throws the weapon up to the proper range of his eye and fires at the very moment when he catches the sight, he will most undoubtedly strike the target, pro- vided the gun is mounted to suit him. If such, however, should not be the case, the shot will be thrown most probably either above or below the mark. If the former should be the case, he will know at once that the stock is too straight and too shorty or, as we have before observed, the gun is too low-mounted for his handling. If, on the other hand, the shot should fall below the target, the stock may be too crooked, or, artistically speaking, the piece is too high- mounted, A long stock, as above remarked, is generally preferable to a short stock in the hands of most sportsmen, for sundry reasons, one of which we have not yet named, which is, that those having long stocks throw their fire with more power, from the circumstance that the butt is always pressed more closely against the shoulder of the shooter. Moreover, there is less recoil to be apprehended from a long stock than a short one, more particularly if the stock should be rather crooked as well as long. Many sportsmen ignorantly attribute their indifferent shooting to the barrels, when they should look alone to the stocking and mounting of the piece; as we are satisfied from long observation that '•'good shooting,'' in most cases, depends far more upon these contingencies than it does upon the shooting-properties of the barrels themselves. The old habit of shaving oiF, or rather scooping out, the butt on one side, to allow the face to come immediately behind the line of the barrel, is perfectly unnecessary, — in fact, is opposed to good 432 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. shooting, as we cannot but think that this shaping of the stock will cause the sportsman at times to shoot very irregular. GUN-LOCKS. Without a ^ooc? loehy barrels of the finest workmanship will be of little avail, and the one is quite as difficult to be obtained as the other. Gun-locks should be manufactured from the hardest metal, and all their parts filed and fitted in the most beautiful manner, with springs of the best construction and suitable strength ; every por- tion of the machinery should work in perfect unison, and, when set in motion, should glide over each other with the same smoothness and evenness observable in the most elaborate pieces of mechanism. Greener remarks on the subject in the following words, and we are sure that every sportsman will heartily respond to such sentiments : — "I have always felt as great pleasure in handling a gun with a pair of good locks as some would experience in listening to the musical productions of the great Handel. There is to me a supe- rior music in the tick of the scear on the tumbler, and the fine elasticity of the mainsprings, moving with a sort of fine, oily feel, though light, as sharp as the lightning playing in the heavens." Good locks can only be obtained from the best artisans, and, to insure their quality, should be made to order by those only in whom we have the utmost confidence. There is no part of the gun that requires so much care and skill as the manufacturing of the lock, and consequently there is no part in which there is so much deception practised. It is impossible to judge of the quality of a lock by a mere examination of its structure, as the spring, swivel, or some other portion of it, may soon grow weak, or give way MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 433 entirely after a few days' shooting, if the metal used in its fabri- cation is not of the very best kind, and put together with the skill so well understood by an experienced and honest gunsmith. The attachment of the swivel and arrangement of the hole for the scear-pin are the two most important points in the construction of a lock, as the one controls the movements of the mainspring, while the other imparts the proper play of the scear on the tumbler, and produces that agreeable click which every sportsman delights to catch upon his ear when handling a good gun. Locks can be purchased in England from a shilling to four pounds a pair. Great numbers of inferior locks are imported by our hardware-men. GUNPOWDER — ORIGIN, ETC. The discovery of this powerful compound, although generally attributed to a German named Schwarz, a student well skilled in alchemy, is nevertheless conceded by most inquirers into the sub- ject to have been well known to some of the more enlightened nations of the ancients, and more particularly, at a very early period, to the ingenious inhabitants of the Celestial Empire, as we have stated in another place. Some investigators of the subject assert that it was in use by the Chinese about or a short time after the commencement of the Christian era; and this curious people themselves even claim its invention and general use for ages prior to this period. Whether this be so or not, we believe that it is granted by all hands that Berthold Schwarz 's discovery of the compound was perfectly ori- ginal in himself, and that therefore he should not be shorn of the immortal celebrity that is and will ever be attached to his name. The ingredients used in the manufacture of gunpowder are pretty generally the same all over the world, each maker having, of course, his own ideas regarding the proportions of the three articles — nitre, charcoal, and sulphur — to be employed. The best English, Scotch, or French sporting-powders are not so strong as the American. The average proportion of the ingredients 28 434 composing the English powder, put up in small tin canisters or wrapped in cartridge-paper for the use of sportsmen, is as follows : — nitre seventy-five parts, charcoal fifteen, sulphur ten. Dupont's powder is more generally used by sportsmen through- out our country than any other; it is more powerful than the English powder, being compounded of — nitre seventy-seven parts, charcoal thirteen, sulphur ten. This powder is put up in small tin canisters of a pound each, and in this way is entirely protected from the moisture that is so hurtful to it. Of its quality we need say nothing, as its long cele- brity is a sufficient guarantee of its worth. When packed as above, expressly for the use of sportsmen, Dupont's powder costs nearly double as much as it does when pur- chased in small six-pound kegs; but the universal satisfaction it affords, and the convenience and safety of carriage, give it a decided preference in the eyes of most sportsmen, notwithstand- ing the additional price asked for it. VARIETIES OF GUNPOWDER. The principal and most appreciable difference in the manufacture of gunpowder is its division into coarse and fine-grained, glazed and unglazed. The first variety — the coarse-grained powder — is used prmcl- pally for all species of large fire-arms, and undoubtedly is the most powerful of the two kinds ; at all events, we have arrived at this conclusion from experiments tried while duck-shooting, and we are supported in our observations by many respectable authorities; that is, we wish to be understood that an ounce of coarse-gramed powder is more powerful than an ounce of fine-grained powder, both of the same manufacture and of equal proportions. The superior strength or projectile force of the coarse-grained has been accounted for on principles which, to our mind, are both reason- able and convincing, and may be explained by the perusal of the following extract taken from Greener's work, on this subject: — "I have always thought and am quite convinced that powder is made MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 435 too small in the grain. For what purpose it is made so, except td please the gunmakers, I never could imagine. I have no hesitation in asserting that, if you obtain powder of fine grain and powder composed of the same quality of ingredients coarser grained, the latter will be found to be stronger than the former. This I have tried in various ways, both by the rifle and the musket, and the same quantity of the coarser invariably gives the longer range. It is owing, in my opinion, to each grain containing within itself greater force. When one is ignited, its effect is greater than that of several small ones. Four times the quantity of small-grained has to be ignited to generate the same force as is required of the larger-grained. Again, the small grain is generally coated with a sort of varnish, which must be injurious to its quickness. Another advantage the larger grain possesses is, that from its size it is less liable to be completely compressed into a solid state, and from the largeness of the interstices around them more atmospheric air is contained in a body, which must greatly benefit it in igniting; as without question (though it is possible to fire powder in vacuo) it will burn better with the assistance of atmospheric air." The duck-shooters of our country, without exception, use the coarse-grained powder, not only because they know it to be stronger, but because it attracts, or rather absorbs, a much less quantity of atmospheric moisture than the fine. We recollect on one occasion, when shooting canvas-backs from one of the points at the Spesutia Narrows, by some unfortunate mishap both barrels of our gun became suddenly disabled, one from the flying off" of the pivot, and the other from some trifling derangement in the machinery of the lock. The morning was a very fine one for the flight of ducks, and they were passing over our heads ever and anon, in countless numbers and at a fair shooting-distance. Unhappily for us, how- ever, we were forced, nolens volens, to be a silent spectator, and not, as was our wont, an active participator in the scenes around us. One of our sporting companions, a thorough blood in this line, and we might term him a "duck-shooter by profession" as well as a "duck-shooter by education," as he had done little else 436 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. but destroy ducks ever since he was big enough to shoulder his father's old musket and take sight over a "blind," — having pain- fully injured the thumb of his right hand, we, having nothing better to do, volunteered to load his gun for him, on condition of a fair proportion of the spoils. Having our patent powder-flask with us, and being accustomed to its use as well as satisfied with its safety, we very naturally commenced loading from its contents, and con- tinued so to do for a considerable time, while our friend was banging away at every moment, but, strange to say, bringing down scarcely a single victim, although those around us were heaping up piles about them ; and so did our partner till we commenced load- ing for him. The old veteran could not account for his bad shooting, and attributed every miss to some new cause, first one thing and then another, cursed the gun, damned the ducks, and finally gave up in despair. We of course were equally as much surprised at his want of success, and even took the gun from his hands and essayed a few shots, but without much effect. The morning had now fully broken, and, upon closer inquiry into the cause of this bad shooting, our partner ascertained, to his no small horror, that we had been loading all the time with fine-grained canister-powder, instead of the coarse-grained article which all duckers prefer ; in fact, they object to using any other kind. The indignation of our friend was great when he made this discovery; and his vanity of shooting well, which had been on the wane for the previous half-hour, was now fully appeased, as he declared that '^ such stuff,'' meaning the fine powder, was not fit to make a squib of, let alone bring down a savory canvas- back. This powder, however, we had been using the day before on partridges, and had succeeded in killing five brace with it without much difficulty. This anecdote certainly goes to demonstrate how strong the prejudice is among duck-shooters in favor of the coarse powder, and at the same time proves conclusively that, though it would kill partridges at a reasonable distance, it had not force enough to carry heavy shot as strongly as the common coarse- MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 437 grained powder, such as is sold in the small country shops, from which source our friend always procured his supply ; for as soon as he loaded with it the ducks came tumbling down right and left. GLAZED POWDER. Some powder is glazed and some not. The comparative strength of the two kinds is not much, if at all, affected by the process which it undergoes in glazing, as the grains are merely triturated with blacklead, to give them the 'glossy appearance which they present. It is deemed absolutely indispensable that all military powder should be glazed, to prevent the formation of too much dust by af- friction in its transport from place to place ; as it is a well-esta- blished fact that a charge of powder compressed into a solid, dense mass, as it necessarily would be if its whole granular as well as angular construction was destroyed by pulverization, must lose some of its propulsion by the slowness of combustion. As has been remarked by Greener, "though it is possible to fire powder in vacuo," still, the presence of a certain amount of air in the interstices of any combustible mass will greatly facilitate the rapid penetration of the flame through it, and consequently increase the projectile power dependent upon its instantaneous combustion. Commenting on Dupont's sporting-powder. Captain Mordecai, of the Ordnance Department, remarks as follows : — " Dupont's very fine-grained sporting-powder, being thoroughly in- corporated, free from dust, and composed of angular grains, although highly glazed, far surpasses all the other kinds in quickness." Further on, he again observes : — " The great and uniform superiority of Dupont's fine sporting-powder, even in large charges in the cannon, evinces the combined effect of the most careful preparation of the materials, their thorough incorporation, perfect drying, and high glazing, all of which are favorable not only to the production of the greatest inherent force of the composition, but to the quick 438 LEWISES AxMEEICAN SPORTSMAN. combustion of the grains and to the rapid transmission of the flame through the whole mass of the powder."* TESTS FOR POWDER. English sporting-powder, when good, is found to impart scarcely any color to the hand when crushed in the palm with the thumb. American powder, to be perfect, should be equally free from all charcoal appearances. There is a simple method of ascertaining the quality of powder, which in some measure may be relied on. If a small quantity be placed upon a sheet of white paper and exploded, it should burn with a sudden white smoke, accompanied with a peculiar sharp report, or rather phiz, that the ear soon be- comes familiar with and easily detects. There should be nothing left on the paper after the explosion if the powder be superior ; if, however, the residuum be blackish matter, the probability is that there is too much carbon in the powder ; if the paper should exhibit a dotted appearance, with little black splotches over it, we would be led to suppose that the sulphur or nitre was inferior in quality and badly incorporated. THE BPRBUVBTTE, OR POWDER-PROVER. It is not an easy matter to ascertain the real pulsion of powder, even by subjecting it to the test of the epreuvette, — an instrument ♦ See report of experiments on gunpowder, made at Washington Arsenal by Cap- Mordecai. MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 439 ill common use in England, but scarcely known in this country, and on this account deserving of notice in this place. The epreuvette, though the most perfect of all small instruments yet invented for the purpose of testing the strength of gunpowder, if not used properly will often give very unsatisfactory results. The construction of the epreuvette should be perfect in all its parts, more particularly in the spring which controls the move- ments of the wheel on which the graduations are marked. The mouth-piece, or rather the piece which closes the muzzle of the epreuvette and is attached to the grading-wheel, should fit closely in its place, so as not to allow any space to be seen between the two surfaces when held up to the light. One trial is not sufficient to test the momentum of the powder ; it will be better to make several, and then take the average of the whole. The chamber should be nicely cleaned after each fire, provided we wish to obtain a close analysis. POWDER PRESERVED FROM MOISTURE. Powder should be kept dry and never exposed to a humid atmo- sphere, as it has a great tendency to imbibe moisture and will soon become unfit for service. If by any mishap it should become damp, it can be dried before the fire, or in the sun, on a metal dish ; a coal fire is the proper kind of fire before which to dry it, — a wood-fire being rather dangerous, owing to the chance of sparks flying out, as they frequently do, more particularly if the wood be wet or green. We have dried our powder more than once by putting the dish which contained it on top of a brick placed on a stove. The fact of the tendency of powder to absorb moisture may be very fairly and satisfactorily demonstrated by accurately weighing a certain proportion of the article, and placing it in a humid situa- tion for a few hours, when it will be found that it has increased very perceptibly in weight, owing to the imbibition of the aqueous particles of the moist air. All circumstances being equal, small- grained powder will necessarily absorb moisture more rapidly than large-grained, for the simple reason that, in a given weight of 440 either, the smaller the grain the larger the surface exposed to the effects of the atmosphere. The projectile force of powder is con- siderably diminished by dampness, because, its combustion being much slower, a large proportion must necessarily be driven out of the gun before the whole mass is entirely consumed, and the explosion consequently must be weakened, as the phenomena at- tending the burning of gunpowder are accounted for by the sudden and rapid generation of an elastic fluid, which of course will not be properly created by the slow and unequal combustion of a damp compound. If the nitre used in the manufacture of powder is not perfectly pure and thoroughly embodied with the other ingredients, it will not burn with the rapidity necessary for the generation of the projectile force inherent in this compound when all its constitu- ents are properly incorporated. The mere circumstance of powder absorbing moisture when ex- posed to its effects, with more than ordinary rapidity, is a positive proof of its inferiority, and is a sure evidence that the nitre is not pure, and that it contains some portion of muriate of soda, which substance is generally found in combination with it in its natural state, and which every one of the least observation is perfectly aware attracts humidity with singular facility.* If the powder is moist, besides losing a considerable portion of its strength, it soon fouls the gun, the grains become caked together, and will not enter the nipple-hole, &c. For these reasons, the sportsman will be convinced that he cannot be too careful of his powder, and will take every necessary precaution to prevent the subtle compound from imbibing the particles of moisture with which the air is loaded during muggy weather, more particularly on the bay-shore, when * Captain Mordecai, referring to experiments made with some powders manufac tared at the Eastward, remarks : — ** In consequence of the impurity of the saltpetre in these powders, a great quantity of moisture is rapidly absorbed by them j the deliquescent salts in the nitre are dissolved, the grains become so moist as to hold in solution the nitre, which becomes separated from the other components, and the powder is soon rendered completely unserviceable." MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 441 in quest of water-fowl. It should always be kept in tin canisters, and never be trusted to paper, which of itself has a tendency to absorb dampness, to say nothing of the danger of having packages of powder carelessly wrapped in old newspaper and lying about. A package of this kind, containing nearly half a pound of powder, we know of having been thrown into the fire by a thrifty house- wife, who mistook it for a bundle of rubbish that she had collected up in a similar paper a few moments before, for the purpose of consigning it to the flames. The consequences of this unpar- donable carelessness on the part of the sportsman might have proved very serious to us all, had not the accident been observed by a brother chum sitting close by, who, with admirable courage and presence of mind, seized the burning package with the tongs, and, rushing with it to the window, which had been opened a few moments before for the purpose of taking an observation of the weather, threw it out, where in a moment or two it exploded with a tremendous noise, but fortunately did no mischief. It is almost useless for us to warn the sportsman to be careful, when drying powder, to expose as little as possible at a time to the fire, or he may blow the roof off the house, and perhaps blow himself out of the window. With proper caution, there is no more danger in drying powder than there would be in heating so much sand; but in the hands of a careless or reckless person the process would be rather hazardous. PROPERLY LOADINQ THE GUN. The art of rightly proportioning the charge for our piece is not so easy a matter as many suppose ; but, on the contrary, it requires considerable judgment and experience to ascertain the exact quantity of powder and shot that a piece will best carry. If we wish to ascertain this fact conclusively, a series of experiments should be instituted immediately after the purchase of our gun; in truth, every sportsman should settle this important fact to hid entire satisfaction at once, as we can assure him that much of his success in shooting depends upon the proper loading of his piece. 442 If the gun be overcharged, as is much too often the case both with powder and shot, the whole load will be carried out of the barrel with an unequal, unsteady, and wild impetuosity, very dif- ferent from the regular, easy, and determined motion imparted to it by a proper proportion of each. The gun, no matter how tightly grasped, if overloaded, will spring from the hand, and a recoil more or less severe will be felt at the shoulder. This should never occur in small fire-arms. In large duck-guns a slight recoil is excusable; but even in these pieces proper loading will almost invariably remedy the evil if the gun is skilfully constructed; and if after judicious management it still proves incorrigible, the weapon had better be sold for want of use, or placed in the hands of some one who cares but little for a bruised arm and a sore shoulder. As before said, a series of experiments should be instituted to find the exact charge that suits your gun best ; that is, what proportion of powder and what proportion of shot will kill the farthest with the greatest certainty. This can be accomplished by firing at sheets of paper at a distance of forty yards with different-sized loads, and marking down the result of each discharge. To make this chapter more complete, we cannot do better than introduce a few paragraphs from Greener on this subject, and at the same time remark that every sportsman will derive abundance of information appertaining to the gun by the perusal of that writer's highly instructive work : — "I have repeatedly stated that all guns will burn a certain quantity of powder; you must, therefore, ascertain what that quantity is, which can only be done by practice. Suppose you begin with two drachms, and vary the charge one-eighth of a drachm each shot up to three drachms and a half, or as may be required, according to the length and bore of the gun, and, for precision, taking three shots with each charge at a sufficient num- ber of sheets of paper; whichever you find strongest with the least quantity of powder, that is the best charge, as very likely # MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 443 the two next additions of powder will shoot equally strong, and yet not stronger, because more of it remains unburnt. Therefore, the least quantity which shoots equally strong is the proper charge, which having once ascertained, never change for any person's plan. "Next as to the charge of shot. All guns, according to their bore and length, will shoot a certain weight and a certain size of shot best. A great deal of shot in a small bore lies too far up the barrel, and creates an unnecessary friction ; and the shot, by the compression at the moment of explosion, becomes all shapes, — a circumstance which materially affects its flight. If of too great a weight, the powder has not power to drive it with that speed and force required to be efficacious, because the weight is too great in proportion. Those who reason with mathematical calculation will object to this doctrine. Say they. The greater the weight the greater the effect. No doubt it is so, if thrown with a propor- tionate force ; but that cannot be obtained with a small gun. We must adapt the weight of projectile force to the power we are in possession of; and, from many experiments, I am inclined to think that a fourteen -gauge two-feet-eight barrel should never be loaded with above an ounce and a hulf of shot, (No. 6 will suit her best,) and the utmost powder she will burn. A fifteen-gauge will not require more than one ounce and one-fourth ; and no doubt No. 7 would be thrown by her quite as strong as No. 6 by the fourteen- gauge gun, and do as much execution at forty yards with less recoil; and, setting aside all other reasons, I should, on this ac- count, prefer the fifteen-gauge gun, if both be of a length, finding I can do as much execution at the same distance with the one as with the other. To render a fourteen-gauge barrel superior, I think Colonel Hawker is right in stating that it should never be under thirty-four inches, which description of barrel I very much approve." 444 LEWISES AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. BURSTING OF GUNS. COMMODORE STOCKTON'S EXPERIMENTS. RECOIL, ETC. There are innumerable causes which tend to the bursting of gun- barrels, even those of the most approved workmanship ; it is not astonishing, therefore, that those manufactured of inferior metal and put together by second-rate artists should frequently be torn to pieces while under the management of reckless and ignorant shooters. Although there are immense numbers of guns imported into this country, both from England and Germany, that could not stand the test of the proof-house, still, they are made of sufficiently good metal to bear the explosion of powder to a certain extent, and, if handled with caution, might perform many years of good service without endangering the lives of their owners. We do not, however, wish our readers to construe this concession of ours in reference to these trashy guns into a favorable notice of them, as we consider the use of weapons of a doubtful character, such as these are, as rather too hazardous an experiment for any one of our sporting friends to venture upon. We will now endeavor to point out some of the oauses that are calculated to produce bursting not only in barrels manufactured of inferior metal, but even in those forged out of the most superior iron and wrought with the greatest care. The first grand cause of bursting springs from the forge, as before stated ; and every one knows full well that many manu- facturers of guns use metal of very inferior description ; and when the bars are being welded into barrels, the artificers themselves are guilty of most culpable negligence and recklessness, little heeding the limbs lost and lives sacrificed by their bad workmanship. If a barrel be either welded, bored, or filed badly, even if it be made of good metal, it may nevertheless burst under the manage- ment of the most careful sportsman. If the thickness of the bar- rel is not uniform throughout its entire length, but weaker at one point than at another, owing to a flaw in the metal, overfiling, or rude boring, it will most probably burst, if overcharged, as the MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 446 expansive force of the powder acts with increased vigor upon these weak points, owing to the resistance it meets with from the stronger portions of the tube. If the subtle fluid generated by the inflammation of gunpowder be suddenly compressed or checked by a contraction in the calibre of the barrel, an undue proportion of the expansive force is exerted upon this point, and the result may be the bursting of the instru- ment. This fact will of itself show the folly of attempting to increase the shooting-powers of the gun by unequal boring of the barrel, or rather the conU'acting of the diameter of the calibre at some given point in its length, as has been practised by some ignorant gun- smiths. We cannot imagine any cause better calculated to burst a fowling-piece than the contraction of its regular calibre from this erroneous method of boring, and would rather trust ourselves with a straight-bored barrel made of far inferior metal, than with one of these ill-shapen instruments forged of the very best stub- and-twist. If the muzzle of the gun becomes stopped up with dirt or snow while in the act of springing over a ditch, or from a fall, and the extraneous matter should be of a consistency suflBiciently hard to offer any considerable degree of resistance to the expulsive force of the powder, the barrel will be bursted without fail near its mouth ; and the same accident will more readily occur if the mouth of the piece be sunk a few inches below the surface of the water, as the resistance offered by this fluid to the passage of the load under such circumstances is far more powerful than that presented by the thin sides of the barrel, and the weaker antagonism must necessarily give way to the stronger. That a gun will burst very readily if the muzzle be sunk a few inches under the water, we have not the least doubt ; and an accident which happened to an acquaintance of ours, some years since, confirms us in the opinion. A fowling-piece may also burst from bad loading; we do not mean entirely from overcharging, but sometimes from the want of proper precaution in ramming down the shot on the powder, or the moving of the wad of one barrel by the jar communicated to it by the explosion of the other. Bursting from this latter cause is 446 occasioned by the sudden accumulation and increased expansion of the elastic fluid behind the object offering the resistance, or rather is the consequence of the sudden check given to its steady exit from the barrel. A ball thus impacted in the barrel of a small gun, musket, or rifle, will be most likely to burst the piece, if fired ; such, at least, is the generally-received opinion. This belief, however, like many other vulgar errors that have descended by repetition from one to another without any detail of experiments entered into necessary to establish the facts upon a certain and indisputable basis, may not be altogether correct. Commodore Stockton, in his paper containing experiments on ordnance instituted by permission of the Navy Department, and lately read before the American Philosophical Society, opposes this long-received doctrine of explosion, and proves very conclu- sively, in some description of large guns at least, that they in- variably burst with a smaller charge when the ball was nearer the powder than when it was at a distance ; and, also, that the burst- ing took place with the shot at the shortest distance from the powder, after sustaining the same charges at a longer distance. These experiments and their results certainly go to prove that such is the fact in large guns of equal calibre and size throughout their whole extent ; but they prove nothing, in our judgment, in the case of small fire-arms of unequal strength and weight of metal. Commodore Stockton also shows most conclusively that the greatest internal pressure at the moment of the discharge is at that part of the gun occupied by the powder. Although the facts elicited from these interesting and highly instructive experiments are very conclusive, so far as they have a bearing on large guns of one hundred pounds* weight or more and of like dimensions throughout their entire length, they do not certainly establish any thing, as before remarked, either ^ro or con,, as to the old theory respecting small fire-arms; we are conse- quently forced to adhere to the ancient doctrine of explosion, and MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 447 Still believe that a fowliug-piece is more apt to burst with a wad or a ball far up the barrel than if pushed home upon the shot or pow- der. This phenomenon we can account for in a way quite satis- factory, at least to our mind, by supposing that when the powder is ignited^ and the expansive fluid generated by this inflammation is set in motion, and, striving to overcome the resistance offered by the sides of the barrel which enclose it, rushes forward up the bar- rel with that certain degree of propulsive force inherent within it- self, and without having any positive obstruction in its way to arrest its onward course till it meets with the barrier opposed to its exit, in the shape of a wad, ball, mud, snow, or some other article which might be lodged in the barrel either by design or accident, this sudden check to its wild career creates a momentary yet a partial pause in its course, and consequently gives rise to an increased lateral pressure at this point in the barrels, which are proportionally thin as they approach the muzzle, and consequently, unlike the heavy breech, are unable to withstand this unequal and sudden shock, and therefore must give way. And thus we may say that bursting under these circumstances arises from the sudden accu- mulation and increased expansion of the elastic fluid behind the object offering the resistance and thereby preventing the free exit of the charge from the gun. Why the same result was not obtained in the case of larger fire- arms, and why the experiments of Commodore Stockton should be diametrically opposed to this theory, we cannot, perhaps, satis- factorily explain, as we have no opportunities of making any prac- tical observations upon the subject; we therefore leave it for the investigation of others, venturing, however, the following re- marks : — If, for experiment, the dimensions of the guns (as Commodore Stockton's all were) be of the same size throughout, and of a calibre sufficiently strong to withstand the shock of the powder used in the experiment, except at the very spot where the internal pressure is greatest, — that is, at the breech end, — and the metal be no stronger there than at any other point along the barrel, it is evi- 448 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. dent to every one of the least thought that a certain charge of powder would have a very different effect upon a gun of this kind than it would on one constructed upon the principle of an ordinary fowling-piece, which has the weight of metal in the breech nicely harmonizing with the length and calibre of the weapon. The experiments therefore cannot hold good in the one case as in the other; because, when the powder is exploded in the large gun, (such as used by Commodore Stockton,) the greatest pressure, as before stated, in this as well as in all other fire-arms, is at the point of ignition, — the breeches. Now, the breeches, or that portion of the barrel surrounding the chambers in the experimental guns, were exactly of the same size as the other parts of the barrel; and consequently, if the gun contained at any time suf- ficient powder to burst it, it would necessarily be burst at the point where the greatest pressure was exerted, and that of course would be at the breech, as already admitted. Again, when the ball is rammed home and the powder exploded, the force of the shock would of course be more confined to the breech than if the ball was far up the barrel. Moreover, the force expended on the breech at the instant of explosion under these circumstances — that is, with a regular home-charge — would be necessarily greater than that generated at the same point if the ball was not directly on the powder, for the ample reason that in the latter case there would be less positive resistance for the powder to overcome * at the moment of ignition, owing to the absence of the ball from its ordinary position. The shock of the explosion would also be somewhat modified, in consequence of its first and most powerful effects having been exerted at the moment of combustion at the breech, and subsequently to a certain extent expended during the passage along the space intervening between the chamber of the gun and the point where the ball was impacted in the barrel. At this point the propelling fluid, we grant, would necessarily meet with a sudden check to its farther progress towards the muzzle, in conse- quence of the mechanical obstruction presented by the wedged ball. This check, however, would not produce, possibly, a shock MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 449 equal to that generated at the first impulse of the burning powder, and therefore could not burst the barrel at this point, if it did not do it at the point of ignition, where the metal in the ex- perimental guns was no stronger, and the force applied we assume to be much greater. This position being correct, the gun would not be so readily burst from an explosion, under these circumstances, as it would if the whole force was exerted upon the one pointy as is the case when the ball is rammed home upon the charge; and consequently it would require a larger proportion of powder to develope the same degree of force, without the immediate pressure of the ball, as would be generated if the ball were rammed tight upon the charge. This, however, would not be the case with a fowling-piece, for the reason that the barrel being of unequal thickness, and the breech four or five times as heavy as the muzzle and in a propor- tionate degree heavier than all other parts of the barrel as you advance towards the mouth, if a ball therefore become impacted in it, and offer considerable resistance to the escape of the powder, the lateral pressure created by this shock might be more than sufficient to rend the gun in pieces at this point, when three times the same force would have no effect upon the breech end. From the foregoing remarks, therefore, it appears evident to us that it would require far more powder to burst a small gun with a regular home-charge than it would to burst it, if, when set in motion, it should meet with a sudden and powerful resistance any distance up the barrel, either in the shape of a wad, ball, or any other accidental obstruction such as before mentioned. Although the internal pressure first produced at the moment of ignition be not sufficient to burst the barrel asunder at the breech, the sudden shock occasioned by the resistance of the obstruction, though not equal to the first force generated at the breech end, might be, however, quite sufficient to tear the barrel to pieces at the point of contact. 29 460 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. RECOIL. The recoil — or, as it is vulgarly called, ^Hhe kick — of a gun'* may be produced by several causes, all of which, however, have their primary origin in the projectile force of the powder, or rather in the resistance offered to the expansive fluid generated by the ignition or explosion of a mass of powder. In all fire-arms of perfect construction the recoil is in proportion to the friction or resistance offered during the exit of the shot from the barrels; and it is only when this resistance, or rather the consequence of this resistance, — the recoil, — becomes disagreeable to the shooter, that we look for the cause and the remedy, as there must, of course, under every circumstance, be some recoil in fire-arms, no matter how perfect the barrels may be in their construction. Imperfections in the manufacture of the barrels are fruitful sources of reaction in shot-guns; and, if they are not perfectly symmetrical in their bore and smooth throughout their entire sur- face, the piece will rebound more or less severely at every dis- charge, no matter how small a quantity of powder may be used. If the barrel be wider at one point than at another, although this difference may not be perceptible to the eye, the repercussion will be greatly increased ; as, the shot being somewhat arrested in its progress through the barrel, the impelling force of the powder exerts itself so much the more to overcome the barrier, and thus creates a back-action, which spends itself upon the breech. A recoil produced from such a cause is of a most dangerous character, and will eventually burst the weapon, as it is impossible for barrels of any ordinary thickness to withstand the oft-repeated and violent efforts of the powder to force its way through the contracted point. For the same reason, a leaded or foul gun, by offering a certain degree of resistance to the exit of the charge, will produce a recoil in proportion to the increased friction, which, even in the best- constructed fowling-pieces, will often be very severe from such a cause. If the shot be too tightly rammed, or an over-quantity be I, the recoil, of course, will be increased in proportion to the MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 461 resistance offered. A straight stock will feel the effects of this retro-action, or rather transmit those effects to the person of the shooter, much more severely than a crooked stock, as the latter, by receiving the force of the concussion in an oblique direction, breaks the shock before it reaches the extremity. Bad powder, particularly damp powder, adds greatly to the recoil; and no doubt some of our readers have remarked that there is always more recalcitration on a wet day than on a clear one; this is owing, to-be-sure, in part, to the barrels getting dirty much sooner, but principally to the dampness of the powder, which impedes the im- mediate ignition of the whole mass, and consequently retards the exit of the shot, which moves before the propelling force with a kind of jerking motion. It has been asserted by some writers that the position of the touch-hole regulates in a great measure the power of the recoil. Suppose, for example, that the touch-hole communicates with the centre of the mass of powder : it is contended that at the moment of ignition the expansive force of the generated fluid is exerted as strongly backwards upon the breech as it is forwards or upon the sides of the barrel; but, on the other hand, if the powder is ignited from the base of the mass, the whole expulsive force will be directed forwards upon the shot, and the recoil consequently be much lighter. The less a gun reacts, the more certain and effective will be the delivery of its shot ; as it is well ascertained that a piece made perfectly stationary in its bed will throw a ball much farther, and consequently with much more force, than one that is allowed to rebound at every discharge. A kicking gun, when grasped tightly and held firmly to the shoulder, will spring back far less than if lightly placed against it ; it will also throw the shot much farther and with greater certainty. This fact may be very easily ascertained by a simple experiment. Suspend, for example, a fowling-piece by two cords from a suitable frame, or from the limb of a tree, in such a manner as to permit an unrestrained recoil, having first charged it with the ordinary load of povfder and shot; now fire the gun at a target 452 properly arranged, and take especial note of the result; then load the piece as before, and secure it tightly, so that no rebound can take place ; move the target some distance farther off, and note the result of this discharge. It will be observed that the last fire will be far more effective than the first, both as regards the strength and range, although the distance of the target has been con- siderably increased. In support of the time-honored hypothesis relating to the effects to be apprehended from the presence of certain obstructions, in- tentionally or accidentally placed up the barrels of small fire-arms, we hardly know what to advance. Although we have not made any experiments to establish the position, still we feel quite sure in asserting that the old-received opinion is perfectly correct ; that is, that there will he a greater recoil with the same amount of pow- der if there he some obstruction up the barrel, than there would he if the charge was properly rammed home. This opinion, however, is quite contrary to the results obtained by Commodore Stockton ; for he asserts that the recoil, as indicated by the motion of the timber to which the guns were fastened, was less when the hall was at a distance from the powder than when it was rammed home. This, certainly, is very much at variance with the popular belief. If a gun be fired with an ordinary charge of powder, and be perfect in its construction, there will not be any retrograde motion of the piece, or in other words recoil, felt at the shoulder ; or, if there be any, it will be of such a trifling nature that it is not worth noticing. There is, however, a recoil ; and this recoil, as before observed, is deadened in proportion to the weight of metal in the breech, the shape and build of the stock, as well as in some measure by the mode of holding the weapon. If, however, the charge in its exit from the gun should meet with any obstruction far up the barrel, where the metal is thin and the gun only lightly balanced in the hand by a grasp of the stock near the guard, the sudden shock given to it by the resistance of MISCELLANEOUS HINTS. 453 the obstacle encountered will communicate a jar or quick jerk to the weapon, which will be felt at the shoulder, and not expended, as in the other case, upon the breech or stock. The reason of this, we presume, is that the retro-action imparted to a fowling-piece by a regular charge of powder and shot is not a jumping, jerking rebound, but a regular and steady recoil, as it were confined to the thick chambers of the gun, and lost upon the stock before it reaches the shoulder of the shooter; but, in the other case, the motion imparted to the gun is a jumping or jerking recoil, which has not the heavy breech to break its immediate effects upon, and is consequently transmitted without interruption along the outside of the barrel directly to the person of the sportsman. This action will be quite different in the case of the experi- mental ordnance-pieces, as has been already demonstrated; for there was neither a heavy breech nor long stock to ward off or receive the repercussion in those guns, and the whole force of the explosion consequently was transmitted immediately to the timber to which they were all attached, and necessarily occasioned the conclusion arrived at by Commodore Stockton. Commodore Stockton's little pamphlet, the result of much care and ingenuity on his part in the prosecution of these highly in- teresting experiments, requires no notice from us: it speaks for itself. But we may be permitted to state that we were led to this partial review of so^ie of its points from the interest we felt in the subject, and from the circumstance of a copy having been sent to us by a sporting friend, who requested our views on the novel aa well as rather startling results. In conclusion, we beg to remind our readers that we have not denied, nor have we attempted to disprove, any of the conclusions arrived at by the commodore ; we have only endeavored to explain some of these results, and to show that they do not, in our judg- ment, affect the operations of sporting-guns, nor are they suffi- ciently conclusive to change our old-fashioned views on this sub- ject. As far as the experiments go, they are quite satisfactory; 454 lewis's ameeican sportsman. and they certainly have developed some rather strange phenomena, — at all events have given rise to some very new ideas in reference to the matter, which we doubt not will prove hereafter of much practical utility in "gunnery." CHAPTER XXVIIL DISCOVERY AND INTRODUCTION OF GUNPOWDBB. <^r^ OME writers assert that the use of gun- powder, as well as ordnance, was well known to certain of the ancients as far back as the year of our Lord eighty- five; and in support of this hypothesis the following remarks of Uflfano, on the authority of Robert Norton, the author of a work entitled The €runner, printed m London in 1664, are often quoted, viz. : — " That the invention and use, as well of ordnance as of gunpowder, was in the eighty- fifth yeare of our Lord made known and practised in the great and ingenious kingdom of China ; and that in the maretyme provinces thereof there yet remain certaine pieces of ordnance, both of iron and brasse, with the memory of their yeares of founding engraved 455 456 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. upon them, and the armes of King Vitney, who, he saith, was the inventor." Another passage from Philostratus, the historian of Apollonius Tyanseus, about the commencement of the third century, has also been referred to by writers in favor of the antiquity of this invention. In speaking of a people of India called Oxydracse, this ancient authority remarks: — '* These truly wise men dwelt between the rivers Hyphasis and Ganges. Their country Alexander the Great never entered, deterred, not by fear of the inhabitants, but, as I suppose, by religious considerations ; for, had he passed the Hyphasis, he might doubtless have made himself master of the country all around them; but their cities he never could have taken, though he had led a thousand as brave as Achilles or three thousand such as Ajax to the assault, for they come not out into the field to fight those who attack them, but these holy men, be- loved by the gods, overthrow their enemies by tempests and thun- derbolts shot from the walls. It is said that the Egyptian Her- cules and Bacchus, when they overran India, avoided this people also, and, having prepared warlike engines, attempted to conquer them. They made no show of resistance ; but upon the enemy's near ap- proach to their cities they were repulsed with storms of lightning and thunderbolts hurled upon them from above." In the OpuB Magus of Friar Bacon, who died about 1294, may be found a particular description of the effects of a certain com- pound of saltpetre and other ingredients, which, when ignited, gave results analogous to those of thunder and lightning ; and, further- more, it is stated when these elements are rightly amalgamated and properly applied, the force of the explosion would be suffi- ciently powerful to destroy not only an army, but even to overturn an entire city. These remarks, together with some others even still more per- spicuous on this head, have led most inquirers to conclude that the learned friar was at least well acquainted with the components and effects, if not well versed in the precise composition and applica tion, of gunpowder. DISCOVERY AND INTRODUCTION OF GUNPOWDER. 457 This information, it may very justly be presumed, was not ori- ginal with himself, but rather obtained from the others of his brotherhood, the monks, who had learned of its existence among the Chinese, as well as seen its operations during their missions in those far-distant regions, from whence they had then lately re- turned. Some writers go so far as to suppose that the pious but wily monk was well acquainted with the composition of gunpowder, as well as its terrible effects, but at the same time assert that he was fearful of betraying the wonderful secret, knowing full well that its introduction into the world would be attended with the most calamitous consequences; and, for humanity's sake alone, if not from other ulterior motives, he determined to keep the secret as long from the knowledge of man as possible. Be all this as it may, there is no doubt that Berthold Schwarz, a German monk of the Order of St. Francis, was the first person who made the composition of this wondrous sub- stance generally known to the world, and that the discovery, though ancient it might he, was nevertheless altogether original with himself. The circumstances of the discovery are these : — Berthold Schwarz, a native of Freiburg, in the Grand Duchy of Baden, during his relaxation from monastic duties, occupied much of his time in the fascinating and absorbing pursuit of chemistry. During some of his manipulations, having pounded in a mortar an accidental mix- ture of charcoal, sulphur, and nitre, he was amazed and wildly astounded by its sudden and fearful explosion on the hap-hazard application of a spark of fire. This terrible but at the same time novel exhibition of power in a simple compound like this very naturally aroused in the mind of the zealous student a spirit of investigation; and the result of further experiment was the discovery of that still mysterious composition known as gunpowder, — a discovery which has not only immortalized the otherwise obscure monk, but, since its general introduction and application to the use of fire-arms, has actually 458 LEWISES AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. given rise to a new era in the workings of man, — in fact, has been the chief and all-powerful instrument in not only shaping the mighty affairs of great nations in times past, but must ever con- tinue to exercise a decided influence over the destinies of mankind in all time to come. All this happened about the year 1340 ; and the city of Freiburg has lately very properly commemorated the wonderful event by the erection of a handsome fountain, emblazoned with suitable in- scriptions and surmounted by a statue of the fortunate discoverer. CANNON. Notwithstanding the reputed antiquity of cannon, they were little known in England before the fourteenth century, and were first employed as an engine of war by Edward III. At this early period of their introduction into military service, they were of rude construction and cumbersome proportions, and so continued, with little or no improvement, till the reign of Henry VIII. This monarch soon undertook the manufacture of ordnance, which was continued with spirit and energy by his persevering successor, Queen Elizabeth, and, during her reign, vast improvements were made in their fabrication. The "hand-goune" was next invented, — an instrument sufficiently rude in its construction when compared with the guns of the present day, but still, as a first effort in this branch of manufacture, a very serviceable weapon of attack as well as defence. This "goune" was made light enough to be carried about by one person, and was fired by the application of a match. The stocked gun was the next improvement, which also was fired by the application of a lighted match to the priming, either through the medium of a match-lock or by the direct interposition of the hand. The "wheel-lock" was the next invention, and approximated closely in principle if not in construction to the flint-lock of the present day, a spark of fire being produced, and communicated to the priming by the friction of a notched wheel passing rapidly THE GtJN. 469 over the edge of a flint-stone. The flint-lock was the next step in order ; and the percussion-lock, in its approved form, was the last and best of all. THE GUN. The gun being the principal instrument by means of which the sportsman destroys his game, it seems proper that it should now claim our particular attention, as the proper knowledge of its man- ufacture, as well as its perfections and imperfections, should be thoroughly understood by the tyro before entering upon the sports of the field. Without imparting this information, we cannot expect our sporting friends to be competent to provide themselves with such fowling-pieces as will come up to our ideal of beauty or answer the good purposes that we design to exhibit in a superior gun. Many of our readers will smile in anticipation of a long and tedious dissertation upon a subject in which they can take but little interest beyond the mere outward examination of an instru- ment the skilful making and putting together of which has occu- pied the minds of many of the most intelligent and ingenious spirits of the Old World as well as the New. Many of our sportsmen are content to go to the field with a second-rate or third-rate gun, feeling well satisfied with its goodness provided it kills occasionally at long 460 lewis's ameeican sportsman. distances and does not burst when overcharged. The luxury of a superior gun, if we may so speak, is never dreamed of by these people; and they cannot conceive the possibility of shooting for years with the same fowling-piece without once seeing it the least out of order. A weapon so dangerous as a gun, even in the hands of the most careful, should certainly be of excellent quality, and all its parts made of such materials as to insure its safety at all times, under judicious management, and leave no room for those melancholy accidents that so often occur from the bursting and going off of inferior guns when least expected, owing to impurity of metal or the imperfect structure of the locks or other portions of the machinery. We do not intend to occupy, or rather lore, the reader with a long scientific dissertation upon gun-making, but merely wish to direct his attention to the subject in such a way that he will gain ,in a few pages all the practical information in reference to a gun that will be necessary to make him familiar with its history, manufacture, and construction. Before the introduction of guns into England, the longbow and crossbow were the weapons mostly employed in war, as well as for the chase. The latter instrument was most in favor with sports- men, owing to the greater strength and certainty with which it threw its arrows. Although the use of fire-arms, as before stated, was somewhat known during the reign of Elizabeth, as well as that of her predecessor, Henry the Eighth, and even as far back as Edward the Third, (1327,) who is said to have first used a species of mortar for the purpose of ejecting large stones against the ScoUi when bombarding them in their native fastnesses, still, these rude weapons were of so unwieldy a character that it was not thought of introducing them into the chase. Even in the reign of Eliza- beth, the muskets made under her directions for the use of the army were so large and heavy that it was impossible for the soldier to travel any great distance with them, or to hold them out at arm's length for the purpose of firing ; but each one was obliged to carry a staff with him, which he stuck in the ground to rest the THE GUN. 461 instrument upon while taking aim at his adversary. It was not till the reign of Charles the First (1625) that small-arms were made of such proportions as adapted them to the use of sportsmen ; and even at this late period— nearly three hundred years after the introduction of gunpowder — the small-arms, though vastly im- proved, were still rude and cumbersome instruments, and suitable only for the pursuit of large animals, as they could not be handled or discharged with sufficient ease to enable the bearer to kill a bird on the wing. These weapons, like many other articles, have gone through a regular series of improvements, until at last they have in the present age arrived at a state of perfection beyond which it is difficult to conceive any thing superior. Sportsmen should not hesitate between a doubtful and a superior gun on account of a trifling expenditure, as it is a purchase that is made only once or twice in a lifetime; and there is a certain degree of comfort and pleasure in going to the field for a day's amusement with the assurance of handling a weapon which no ordinary usage can injure, and that we have nothing to fear from accidents, which feeling of confidence richly repays us for all the unusual outlay. The saving of a few dollars in the purchase of a gun would ill repay a shooter for the loss of a hand by an explosion, or perhaps the maiming of a friend or the death of a valuable dog by the going off of his gun, owing to poorly-made locks. 462 THE BREECH-LOADER. Notwithstanding the improvements made from time to time to which we have referred, the muzzle-loader in its highest perfection failed to give satisfaction. The labor and time required for loading in the field detracted greatly from sport, to which was added the impossibility of changing the charges quickly if circumstances re- quired, and over and above all was the danger of accident while loading one barrel over a loaded one, necessarily pointed directly towards the sportsman's hands, if not at other portions of his person. Recognition of these defects caused a demand for a more convenient and safe weapon, and led to the production of the modern breech-loader, which was, however, not a purely modern invention, but an improvement upon a crude form produced and discarded for its defects in the early ages of gunnery. When first brought out, these new guns were very imperfect. The levers were inconveniently placed, the different parts badly fitted, and the bolting actions weak, so that the barrels soon became loose and shaky. The shells were as bad as the guns, being fired by pins which projected through holes in the breeches, and if not accurately struck by the hammers, were bent and failed to explode the caps. These defects were quickly remedied. The pin-shells were superseded by centre fire, the awkward levers changed for convenient ones, accuracy in fitting secured, strong actions invented. THE BREECH-LOADER. 463 the hammers made rebounding, and snap-fastenings substituted for the fore-end bolts, and the gun thus improved was made the most perfect weapon ever offered to the sporting public, and for years fully satisfied all demands. One defect, however, still existed, viz., that of external hammers or strikers, which had to be drawn back before firing, and also were a source of danger through liability to catch in twigs or in the sportsman's clothing. This led to the invention of the so-called hammerless gun, from the fact that the strikers are situated upon the inner surface of the lock-plates, and the blow upon the firing-pin is delivered internally rather than ex- ternally. The hammerless system, regarded in a purely mechanical light, is a great improvement upon all past systems, because it permits of a lock consisting of less pieces, of more simple construc- tion, and of consequent less liability to get out of order, and in addition to this it also permits the locks to be cocked automatically by the simple action of opening the gun to receive the shells. As all new inventions meet with opposition until their value is proved beyond question, the hammerless guns were declared dan- gerous, because, as the strikers are concealed, the sportsman cannot tell at a glance whether his gun is cocked or not, and so may get a discharge unexpectedly. To offset this, we have the fact that the gun is known to be cocked every time it is opened, and remains cocked until fired, or the hammers are let down. Under either of these conditions it is as safe as any other gun can be, and when cocked, safety is specially provided for by automatic trigger and tumbler-bolts, brought into action simultaneously with the cocking of the gun, and remaining in action till released by pushing aside the safety-catch. The position of this catch upon the upper surface of the gripe plainly indicates whether the locks are bolted or not, and by its action they can be bolted and released at any time, and as often as circumstances require. In addition to this, many gun- builders have placed special indicators upon their guns, by which the position of the strikers is shown as plainly as by the old ex- ternal hammers. In its present form, the hammerless gun possesses the great advantages over all guns of the past of being more safe, 464 more convenient in operation, and less liable to give out with use. In point of simplicity and efficiency further improvement appears impossible, since every recognized defect in construction has been done away with. Critics still exist, doubting Thomases who can never be satisfied, but popular opinion is overwhelmingly favorable to the new gun, and the sportsman who seeks the most perfect weapon ever turned out, will find it in the hammerless gun of any one of a dozen different builders. It is true there are different hammerless actions, the inventions of different builders of repute. It is also true there are different bolting actions, and these all have their supporters and opponents. We do not propose to criticise or express any preference, as we believe the guns of the best English and American builders are any of them good enough for any sportsman's use, however they may vary in details. All are sound, well-proportioned, serviceable guns, guns which will last near a lifetime of ordinary shooting, and this being the case, it is, in our opinion, mere hypercriticisra to make a choice. BORING FOR SHOOTING QUALITIES. No matter how perfect in construction a gun may be, if it does not possess the qualities of close, hard shooting, it is valueless for use. Various systems have been tried, from the perfect cylinder to the choke, but the results of careful, scientific, and extensive trials have proved the superiority of the choke-bore over all others. Choke-boring simply consists in reducing the diameter of the barrel as it approaches the muzzle. By such reduction the charge is concentrated, and delivered at the muzzle in more compact form than it leaves the shell in the breech. This re- duction in diameter varies with different builders. Some bore their guns with a long taper extending back from the muzzle one- third or more of the length of the barrels, others bore a cylinder till within an inch of the muzzle, and then contract suddenly, and still others taper, relieve, and taper again. Guns of all these styles of boring shoot admirably, but the inuzzle-choke is less ENGLISH AND AMERICAN GUNS. 465 likely to be enduring than the taper, owing to the great friction, and to the comparatively small surface upon which it is exerted. The closeness of the shooting depends upon the degree of contrac- tion, and this is known as full or modified choke, the former being generally applied to duck- and trap-guns, and the latter to those generally used in the field. It is customary also to bore the barrels of field guns difierently, one being less choked than the other, the open barrel being used for close shots, and for the first bird in doubles, while the other serves for long shots. This style of bor- ing is open to the objection that it tends to induce the use of one barrel more than the other. The great majority of single shots are at short ranges, and for these the open barrel is used, as the choke cuts the bird up badly. The gun is thus subjected to an unequal strain, which will, in time, produce greater wear in the barrel most used, and in addition to this, the constant use of one barrel tends to weaken the sportsman's command over the other. Few men who use guns of this kind shoot equally well with both barrels, whereas by having both bored alike, and accustoming him- self to the use of either by shooting them in regular order, irre- spective of where the bird may be, the sportsman wears his gun equally throughout, and acquires a skill which he can depend upon at all times. Choke-boring has given breech-loaders a great advantage over muzzle-loaders in pattern and penetration, as shown by careful targeting. Some muzzle-loaders have displayed exceptional shoot- ing powers, but the best of them when subjected to the test of scientific trials, in comparison with choke-bored breech-loaders, have invariably failed to hold their own. Thus the improved breech-loader, in addition to all the other advantages we have named, possesses also shooting qualities superior to its predecessors. ENGLISH AND AMERICAN GUNS. Opinions differ upon the comparative merits of English and American guns. In this we ignore a certain class of sportsmen who appear to think that everything English is necessarily better 80 466 than home productions, and refer to the unprejudiced class, that judges by intrinsic merit, and not by name or location. There is certainly no apparent reason why foreign builders should surpass us in the production of guns. In other manufactures we at least hold our own, and we have as intelligent mechanics, and as perfect machinery and tools, as any nation upon the face of the earth. It is true, gun-building is here a comparatively recent undertaking, but Americans have the faculty of profiting by the experience of others, and the guns turned out here show that this case is no exception to the rule. But few gun-makers in either country manufacture their own barrels, finding it cheaper and better to buy them in the rough from manufacturers who devote themselves ex- clusively to barrel-making, and this market is as open to American as to English makers, and our best guns are put up with barrels of precisely the same quality as those which appear in the finest English weapons. Some of our makers have lately forged as well as finished their barrels, and we are bound to say we have seen American barrels which for quality of material, shape, and per- fection of finish equalled any we have ever examined bearing the best English names. The high reputation of any maker is very properly considered a guarantee for quality in his guns, since such reputation can neither be obtained nor perpetuated without it is fully warranted by the goodness of his work. The reputations of our best makers are national, and their guns are constantly gaining favor, and holding their own against those which are imported. This of itself is sufficient to show that in the opinion of a very large class, American guns will bear comparison with those made in England at the same price, and this is all that can be expected. There is in England a class of makers who build exclusively for the nobility and wealthy patrons, and who charge prices which are higher than any American builders can obtain. The guns which they turn out possess a beauty and elegance of finish which is unequalled by cheaper ones on either side of the water. Practically they are no better than cheaper ones, built at prices which pay for thoroughly good work, but it is undeniable that, like other elegant MACHINE- AND HAND-MADE GUNS. 467 articles, they are desirable if a man has the means to gratify his desire for the best. These guns are, however, placed above com- petition with others costing less, irrespective of place of manufac- ture, and must, therefore, be regarded as out of the question, when comparison between American and English guns is made. Guns turned out by either American or English makers of high reputa- tions may be relied upon to be of fine material, sound workman- ship, and high finish, that will shoot well, and with proper care last for years of continual use. We have used many foreign and domestic guns, and have no choice between them, except such as is based upon a desire to patronize home products when of equal quality with the imported. MACHINE- AND HAND-MADE GUNS. English gun-makers decry American guns because most of them are made by machinery. The conservatism of the English char- acter disinclines them to changes, and prejudices them against articles not produced in the old ways. So far these objections are at least honestly entertained, but beyond this, there is unquestion- ably the bias of national prejudices, the egotism of the English character, which forbids recognition of goodness in American pro- ductions, and the inability of hand-work to compete with machine- work in point of cheapness. The popular idea of cheap English labor is erroneous when applied to certain classes. Skilled labor commands high pay in the best English workshops, and guns turned out in such must bring good prices to be remunerative. In addition to this is the duty on guns sent to this country, and the total cost is great when compared with that of guns made by machinery, so that to maintain a footing in the American market buyers must be taught to consider English guns the best, hence the belittling of American guns to which we refer. Greener, from whom we have already quoted, and whose experi- ence in gun matters makes his opinion valuable when it is free from prejudice, has been most unjust in his criticisms of American guns, and his unfounded assertions have been repeatedly contra- 468 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. dieted and disproved in our sporting journals. No man can with truth bring such charges u gainst our guns as he has brought, and in the face of the undeniable fact that machine-work is more accurate and exact than any which depends upon human muscles, it is absurd to deny the high character of work performed by machinery as perfect as any ever invented. Greener, and all other foreign objectors, admit that no two guns can be made exactly alike by the most skilful hand workman. Some slight variation in the different parts will always be present, which utterly prevents inter- changeability. The different parts of machine-guns, on the other hand, are duplicates of each other, and can be substituted in case of accident. Finish can be brought to greater perfection by machinery than by hand, and certainly the quality of metal is not affected by the manner in which it is worked. No sensible objec- tion can, in short, be brought against American guns on this score, and the claims of foreign builders will be taken cum grano salts by men who judge from examination of the guns, and not from blind acceptance of prejudiced statements. THE C50ST OP A GOOD GUN. A gun, like any other article, has a value proportional to the quality of the material employed in its construction and to the work put upon it. This may be called the natural value, and in addition to this there will be a premium proportional to the maker's reputation. We do not consider this addition unreason- able within certain limits, as a maker is rightfully entitled to recognition of the effort he has made to acquire a reputation for good work, and that reputation is the buyer's security. Without doubt, this premium is in some cases unreasonable, that is, certain builders charge prices greater than those of men who turn out practically as good guns. As we have said before, rich men may patronize these high-priced makers, but the majority of sportsmen are not wealthy, and our object at this time being to consider the cost of a gun, sound, handsome, capable of standing the wear of service, and shooting well, yet within the reach of men of mod- THE COST OF A GOOD GUN. 469 erate means, these builders must be considered as out of the list. Guns are offered on the market at prices varying from twenty- five dollars to four hundred and fifty dollars. We do not hesitate to say a safe and serviceable gun cannot be built at these lowest figures, even if no allowance for profit is made. The cost of materials for sound barrels, with that of careful forging, is suffi- cient to nearly cover the entire price. Cheap barrels are made of the poorest quality of iron, and the forging is so roughly and im- perfectly done that flaws are left, which render the gun liable to burst at any time when severely tried. This weakness is in some degree compensated for by making the barrels heavier than good ones of the same gauge ; but mere weight of metal is not sufficient, as the weak spots will at least partially give way, causing the inside of the barrels to become rough, and destroying their shoot- ing qualities. Again, poor iron has not the toughness necessary to resist the friction of frequent firing, and barrels of this char- acter do not retain their boring, so that a gun which at first shoots well will, in a little time, perform variably or badly. The hinge- pin and the different springs are also subjected to constant strain in opening and closing the barrels, and quickly wear away or break, causing the gun to become loose or temporarily useless. The stocks are imperfectly seasoned, and shrinkage opens still wider the inaccurate fitting of lock-plates, frame, and trigger- guard, leaving spaces for decay under the action of dirt and bad weather. From all these causes it must be evident guns of extreme low price are worthless, and the very lowest for which a gun worthy of the name can be bought, is seventy-five dollars, and this cost must be put entirely upon the materials and construction, leaving nothing for engraving or ornamentation of any kind. A plain, serviceable gun can be got for this, but it must be bought from an American builder, as imported guns have to pay duty and dealers' profits, and at the figure named must of course cost the manufac- turer much less than the American gun, and be proportionally less 470 perfect. Foreign builders of good reputations do not build guns at such rates, and the host of imported cheap weapons sold under apparently good names are the work of disreputable makers, who do not hesitate to palm off their trash upon the public by stamping it with names so nearly like those of noted builders as to deceive buyers who are not well posted, and who are attracted by the glitter of cheap polish and tawdry engraving. Every additional twenty-five dollars up to double the figure we have named may be profitably expended, and for one hundred and fifty dollars a gun good enough for any reasonable man can be got from either good English or good home makers. It is notice- able that guns at one hundred and fifty dollars from English build- ers of repute are less highly engraved than those of American make, ornamentation being made to give way to sound work, duty and dealers' profits, so that the guns can be put upon the market at paying rates, yet sustain their makers' reputations. Under one hundred and twenty-five dollars we would prefer an American gun, but at this figure and upwards English guns may be admitted to competition, and a buyer may suit his fancy for either with con- fidence and safety. THE BEST GUN FOR GENERAL USE. There has been for a number of years a rage for guns of large bore and great weight, but the labor of carrying such in the field has produced a reaction that runs to the opposite extreme, and in place of ten bores weighing from nine and a half to eleven pounds, we find fourteen, sixteen, and twenty bores, some of them as light as five and a half pounds. Guns of both extremes may be ad- missible for special work, but we do not think them the best for general use, and after many years of practical experience in the field we have fixed upon a twelve bore weighing from seven and a half to eight and a half pounds, and with barrels twenty-eight or thirty inches long, according as the shooting is chiefly in cover or the open, as the best all-round gun a sportsman can have. Prop- erly bored and loaded it will kill all game shot over dogs, and on POWDER, SHOT, AND SHELLS. 471 occasions will do good service at the trap or in a stand at ducks and geese, yet never be a burden that a man of ordinary strength cannot carry without fatigue. In pronouncing this the best gun for American sporting we are supported by a very large class of sportsmen, who have repeatedly expressed their opinions in our sporting journals, and we believe the day is not far distant when it will practically supersede all others. POWDER, SHOT, AND SHELLS. Without good powder, shot, and shells the best gun will not kill game. For many years we have given different brands of powder extensive trials in the field, and speaking from experience we are bound to declare Hazzard^s Electric the best we have ever used, with the exceptions of Curtis & Harvey's and PigOu & Wilkes's, both of which are imported from England. With either of these three the sportsman will get the greatest penetration with the least dirt and fouling of the gun, and the only objection to their use is their cost. All are high-priced, and this fact forces men to whom cost is a matter for consideration to use cheaper grades. There are many such of about equal goodness, and we do not propose to discriminate between them, having expressed the above opinion upon the same principle as we spoke of the most costly English guns, viz., because they are practically out of com- petition. All black powder is open to the objection of smoke and dirt, and to remedy this many efforts have been made to discover some form of powder free from these defects. Several sorts of " wood powder" have been invented, but as yet none have given general satisfaction or come into general use. It is not necessary, therefore, to speak of them in detail, but we are justified in saying the time will come when black powder, at least in its present form, will be discarded. The improvement in this line must keep pace with that in guns, and defects so great as those we have mentioned will prompt inventors to renewed efforts, which must ultimately be successful. Two varieties of shot are now before the public, viz., the soft 472 and chilled, the latter being hardened by a mixture of tin. There is no question that the latter gives greater penetration, as it does not bruise as badly in the barrel, and from its greater liardness breaks bones that would flatten or turn aside the soft. For all this the soft variety is most generally used in the field, and for small game does well enough. For wild fowl or at the trap, trial will satisfy any one that chilled shot is the better. A great change has been made within a few years in the sizes of shot generally used. Formerly the large sizes were preferred, but experience demonstrates the at least equal killing powers of the smaller, from the greater number of wounds inflicted. In the smaller sizes the number of pellets to the ounce greatly exceeds those in the larger, and these extra pellets largely increase the chances of hitting the bird, and also of giving it many wounds, which, though not so large or deep as those inflicted by heavier shot, drain its life as effectually. For field-shooting Nos. 10 and 8 are now the favorites, and for ducks No. 6, with No. 2 for We do not hesitate to say we consider American shells fully equal to any imported. The primers and paper used in the Union Metallic, United States, and Winchester Companies' shells are sure fire and tough enough to stand repeated loading. For those who do not care to reload, the second-grade shells are as good as the first, and both are lower in price than the imported shells, which are no better. Paper shells have practically superseded metal, being lighter, more easily carried, and safer, besides costing so little that they can be thrown away after firing. The metal shells give slightly better penetration, and in shooting from a stand or at the trap may be used with advantage, but for field use the paper are good enough, and in such cases " it pays to let well enough alone." /v^ -#^ WELDING BARRELS. 473 WELDING BARRELS. The process for making common gun-barrels is very simple, and is done in the following manner: — A bar of iron is heated and hammered out into a thin flexible rod, resembling a good-sized hoop, of a length and thickness proportionate to the size and weight of the intended barrel. This rod is beat thinner at the muzzle-end than it is at the end intended for the breech. This being arranged, the hoop is heated and turned round a mandrel, (a rod of tempered iron much smaller than the intended bore of the gun,) with the edges overlapping each other the half of an inch or so, and when welded together the barrels have the ap- pearance of being manufactured or bored from a solid rod of iro^. After being turned round the mandrel, the overlapping joints of the hoop are welded together by heating three or four inches of the tube at a time, and beating upon an anvil furnished with several semicircular furrows suitable for the various-sized barrels that are manufactured. This is the modus operandi adopted for forging common barrels, such as are used for exportation, and of which trash immense quantities come to this country through the hands of our hardwaremen. The forging of barrels of a better description is quite a different operation, and requires far more labor and skill. The rod of iron is first heated to a red heat, a few inches at a time, and, one end being made stationary in a vice or other suitable contrivance, the other is seized by an instrument with a handle similar to an auger, by means of which it is twisted round a bar of iron (the mandrel) much smaller than the intended bore. By this operation the fibres of the metal are twisted in a spiral direction, which arrangement is known to resist the explosive force of powder much more than when the fibres all run longitudinally. The hoops or rods are generally about half an inch or less in width, and consequently there will be over two spirals in every inch of barrel, when the twisting process is complete, as the joints are not made to overlap each other, but are forced to unite by a process termed "jumping," 474 after the bar is entirely twisted. The greater the number of spirals to an inch, the more labored and perfect is the manufacture of the barrel, and the more expensive is the getting of it up. The rods for wire-twist barrels are extremely narrow, — only three-eighths of an inch, or less, in width ; and the quantity of spirals is con- sequently increased. After the hoops have been twisted round the rods, the spirals are joined together by heating the unclosed cylinder to a welding- heat and striking the end against the anvil, which springs them together so forcibly that, with a little hammering, the whole cylinder becomes welded as if formed of only one continuous piece. After the spirals are joined, the barrel is hammered in the grooves of the anvil to make it perfectly round. It requires two, three, or four spiral cylinders, according to the length of the piece, to make one barrel; and great nicety and dexterity are necessary to join them together so that the barrel may appear to have been made out of one rod only. In common barrels this union of the rods may be distinctly seen upon examina- tion before they are stained, and indeed very often after they come from the stainer's hands. The next process in the manufacture of barrels is what is termed " hammer-hardening, ' ' which is accomplished by beating the metal for a considerable time in the grooves of the anvil with light hammers, for the purpose of closing the pores, increasing the density and elasticity, and rendering the texture more firm, flexible, and solid. This labor is not often bestowed upon ordinary barrels, got up merely for the home or foreign trade, but on ordered or show-guns only. BORING. The barrels are now submitted to the boring-mill for the pur- pose of giving them their proper calibre. This end is accom- plished with the assistance of steam. The barrel being properly arranged on a frame, the boring-bit is introduced into the breech, and, by the application of the necessary power, is made to traverse GRINDING AND TURNING. 475 the whole extent of the barrel, a stream of water playing upon the metal during the whole process, for the purpose of keeping down the heat that is engendered by the severe friction of the bit, and which, if allowed to increase to its full extent, might injure the quality of the metal. The first or rough boring being finished, a bit of still larger size is now introduced, and the same process gone through with until the barrel is entirely freed from all unevenness and its whole inter- nal surface made to shine like a mirror. If the barrels, after repeated borings, should still exhibit an un- even surface and present flaws and depressions, they are rejected, and the metal returned to the forge, as it would be unsafe to bore them still thinner when the metal is so soft and frangible. Some gunsmiths bore barrels by hand ; and a good workman will make a beautiful instrument in this way, although it will take treble the time to finish it. The utmost nicety is requisite in the boring of barrels, as they should be perfect cylinders, and of exact calibre throughout their entire length. When they have passed the inspection of the lynx-eyed workman to whom this important process is confided, the barrels are handed over to the grinder, to be ground, turned, and polished. GRINDING. The barrels being bored, the grinder submits them to the friction of a revolving stone, for the purpose of freeing them from all the scales and roughness which cover them when they come from the hands of the welder. TURNING. A smooth surface being obtained by the application of the stone by the grinder, the barrels are next to be turned, which is ac- complished either with a common turning-lathe or a self-acting machine. A mandrel exactly fitting the size of the barrel is first intro- duced ; the barrel is then placed in the lathe and the machine set 476 ^EWIS'S AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. in motion, and the whole process completed in a very short time, without any further interference on the part of the workman. Turning by steam is far cheaper and even much superior to handwork, as the process of turning with a common hand-lathe is laborious in the extreme, and quite uncertain except in the hands of very superior and skilful mechanics. The process of turning by a simple lathe is as follows: — The barrel being fixed in the lathe, an inch or so of the surface, both at the breech and muzzle end, is turned to the proper diameter ; the rest is then removed to a distance of four or five inches from these points, and another inch or so of the surface at either end is removed, and so on ; great care being taken, however, at each opera- tion, to make the depth of the turning correspond with the size and calibre of the barrel. This part of the process being accomplished, the next step is to file away, by means of an instrument termed a " float," the projecting surfaces of the barrel intervening between the parts cut out by the lathe ; the barrels are now ready for breech- ing and the tests of the proof-house. BRAZING. The barrels for double-guns are now filed away at the breech and muzzle, to make them lie against each other snugly, bound together, and then brazed with hard solder or brass for several inches. The practice of brazing is highly censured by Greener, who asserts that by this process the strength of common barrels is diminished twelve and a half per cent., and that of hammer-hard- ened barrels to a still greater extent. His ideas on the subject are doubtless very correct, as the heating of the metal afresh to a white heat, for the purpose of brazing, must necessarily take away a portion of the tenacity or strength which it has already acquired during the process of hammer-hardening. PROVING BARRELS. 477 PROVING BARRELS. There is no department in the manufacture of a gun in which there is more deception than that of the proving-house. We do not wish to be understood to say that frauds upon the public actually take place under the eye and with the full cognizance of the com- panics to whom this important duty is confided ; but we wish to in- form our readers that large quantities of barrels are palmed off on the public, and particularly on the American market, having all the insignia of the London and Birmingham proof-houses, which never, at any time, were across the threshold of either establishment. This is accomplished by forging the marks of these companies, and the deception is carried on to a very great extent ; our readers, therefore, will see at once how much reliance can be placed on these marks when pointed out to them by the regular dealers as tests of the goodness of suspicious-looking guns. The proving of gun-barrels was first introduced, according to writers on the subject, about the twelfth century, and originated with the company of gun-makers themselves. The enactments respecting the department, however, after a while became null and void, from a want of adequate means and a proper disposition on the part of the manufacturers to enforce them. Public attention, however, was again aroused to the importance of this matter early in the present century, owing to the discredit that had fallen on all Eng- lish hand-arms, insomuch that sportsmen were obliged to seek their guns in other quarters than their own country, and considerable numbers were purchased in Spain and France for their use. In 1816, further legislation upon this subject made it obligatory upon all manufacturers to send their gun-barrels either to the London or Birmingham proof-houses to be tested, under a penalty of twenty pounds for every infraction of this ordinance ; and the same fine was attached to the forging of the proof-marks of these companies. Previous to these enactments, thousands of guns were manufactured for the foreign trade which were perfectly good-for-nothing, and the dealers themselves in these "sham-guns, sham-dam, park- 478 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. palings," as they were termed, knew full well that they would most likely burst under the first explosion of a moderate-sized charge of powder and shot. Large numbers of these dangerous weapons were sent to this country ; but they were furnished in far greater numbers to the slave-dealers for their nefarious and in- human traflSc on the coast of Africa. One of these worthless instru- ments, costing but a few shillings, was the usual price at that time of a human being ; and what made the transaction still more unholy was the full knowledge, on the part of the traders, that the igno- rant and degraded barterer in his own flesh and blood would soon pay the penalty of his wickedness, in the loss of a portion of his hand, if not his life, by the bursting of his ill-gotten prize. In spite of the parliamentary enactments for the government of this important department, great frauds, as before stated, still continue to be practised upon the public, particularly upon foreign consumers. If all the gun-barrels that come to our country were properly tested on the other side, we would not so often hear of the burst- ing of guns and the distressing accidents consequent upon these mishaps. The fact is, that the London and Birmingham proof- marks are not only forged in England, but they are even imitated in Germany; and large quantities of the latter trash, far worse than the most inferior English, are imported into our country, and may be bought at almost any price ranging from five to fifteen dollars for a double-barrelled gun of quite respectable appear- ance, and warranted in good faith by the ignorant dealers a regu- lar stub-twist. Greener gives a proof-scale of charges by which every barrel should be tested at the established proof-houses, and also furnishes a complete description of the whole business, which is quite inte- resting and instructive. All the respectable gunmakers of Ame- rica test their gun-barrels themselves before they make them up for their customers. The London proof-house requires that double-barrelled guns be joined together before testing, so that the gunsmith may be pre- STAINING BARRELS. 479 vented from making them weaker by filing and brazing after the proof is stamped on them. STAINING BARRELS. There are a great many modes adopted as well as receipts given for the staining of gun-barrels : the basis of all, however, is the action of acids on the metal. Great numbers of inferior barrels are thus colored to resemble those of a superior quality, and these deceptions are very difficult to be discovered by inexperienced eyes. It was formerly supposed that the presence of " smoke-brown staining'' was a positive guarantee of the quality of the metal from which the piece was manufactured : such, however, is no longer the case, as the gunsmiths are now enabled to produce this particular coloring even on the most ordinary barrels. In fact, so numerous and artful are the tricks now resorted to by the Birmingham people to deceive their customers, that the only safe plan left by which to secure a good and trusty gun is to order one of " a competent and honorable artist," of whom there are several on this side of the water as well as on the other. THE METAL USED IN THE MANUFACTURE OF GUNS. Very few sportsmen are acquainted with the peculiar kinds of iron used in the manufacture of gun-barrels. Although they fre- quently make use of the terms "stub-and-twist," "wire-twist," "Damascus barrels," &c., they are generally quite ignorant of the real meaning of these terms, and know nothing of their import, origin, or application; in truth, they palaver often like parrots, 480 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. without understanding the very phrases they make use of. This being the case, we shall endeavor to enlighten them on the subject in as short a space as possible, as we have so many other topics to treat of that we fear to dilate on any subject lest our work become too voluminous for our sporting friends to wade through. STUB-TWIST BARRELS. These barrels are very scarce, — that is, the real genuine stub- twist, — owing to the great difficulty of collecting the materials from which they are manufactured, the cost of working, &c. This may at first sight seem a strange assertion to some of our readers, many of whom, no doubt, are under the impression that most of the guns in the possession of their friends, as well as those they have themselves, styled ^'stub-twist,'* are really and truly as genuine specimens as could be produced in any part of the world. Stop a moment, however, my incredulous friends, till you have learned from Greener of what a stub-and-twist barrel is com- pounded, and how it is wrought into a gun, and then tell me if you can expect to purchase one of these ''rare gems** on this side of the water, or even on the other side, for the paltry sum of twenty-five or thirty dollars, lock and stock included. " Old horse-nail stubs have, for a great number of years, been considered the best kind of scraps for the purpose of making the most superior gun-barrels. Numerous attempts have been made to find a composition of scraps to equal it, but so far without success. At what time the practice of using old stubs was adopted, we have no certain data. From the appearance of the oldest bar- rels, I should venture to say that it was coeval with their invention. It requires, however, no gift of prophecy to say that their use will not long continue, from the difficulty of obtaining them good, being only now to be procured from the Continent, and that with increasing difficulty. "Before proceeding to manufacture them into iron, women are employed to sort and examine each stub, to see that no malleable cast-iron nails or other impurities are mixed with them. They are STUB-TWIST BARRELS. 481 then taken and put into a drum, resembling a barrel-chm-n, through the centre of which passes a shaft that is attached to the steam- engine, which works the rolling-mill, bellows, &c. When the machine is put in motion, the stubs are rolled and tumbled over each other to such a degree that the friction completely cleanses them of all rust, and they come forth with the brightness of silver. The steel with which they are mixed, (generally coach- springs,) after being separated and softened, is clipped into small pieces, corresponding in size to the stubs, by a pair of large shears working by steam. These pieces are then, like the stubs, also put into a drum, in order to be divested of any rust they may retain, and are subsequently weighed out in the proportion of twenty-five pounds of stubs to fifteen of steel. " After being properly mixed together, they are put into an air- furnace and heated to a state of fusion, in which state they are stirred up by a bar of the same mixture of iron and steel, until, by their adhesion, they form a ball of apparently melting metal. During this process, the bar has become sufficiently heated to attach itself to the burning mass, technically called a bloom of iron, and by its aid the whole is removed from the furnace to the forge-hammer, by which it is reduced to a bar of iron of far less weight than the original mass, the weight lost being wasted in the process of welding and hammering. From the forge it passes to the rolling-mill, where it is reduced to the size wanted. By this mode of manufacturing, the iron and steel are so intimately united and blended that the peculiar properties of each are imparted to every portion of the mass, and the whole receives the degree of hardness and softness required. The process is admirable ; and the mixture is calculated to produce a metal the best fitted, under the circum- stances, to answer the purpose of manufacturing gun-barrels of the best description." Spanish barrels, manufactured of the stubs of the nails used in putting on the shoes of the mules and horses, formerly had a great and deserved reputation among English sportsmen, — in fact, com- manding prices far beyond any guns produced in England. So 31 482 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAK. great was the demand for these far-famed barrels, and so eager was every one to possess them, that it was not uncommon — so Blain informs us — for purchasers to be found at twenty, thirty, and even forty pounds for a single barrel. The labor bestowed upon the manufacture of these barrels was exceeded alone by that of the operatives on Damascus arms ; and to such an extent was the hammering of the lusty smith carried, that it was not unusual for a mass of stubs, weighing from forty to fifty pounds, to be reduced by repeated beatings to a rod sufficient only to make a single barrel. By this long and arduous process the utmost ductility, tenacity, and purity were acquired, which ren- dered these guns superior for safety and shooting-powers to all other manufactures. Spanish barrels are no longer sought after with the same eagerness as in former times, owing to many circum- stances that have operated to prejudice the public against them, as well as the present superior character of the stub-twist manufac- tured by English artists, and which, we opine, cannot be ex- celled by any barrels coming either from Spain or the East. Grreat deception was practised in the getting up and sale of Spanish barrels as soon as it was known that there was such a demand for them in England, — a demand, in truth, which could not be supplied in the ordinary course of trade, as there was not suffi- cient genuine stub-metal in all Spain to make these barrels fast enough for their foreign, much less their home, consumption. In- ferior barrels consequently were imported from Spain, having the names of the most celebrated makers of Madrid engraved on them. Nor was this the only deception practised upon the public, for Spanish barrels were actually counterfeited in the manufactories of Germany, and the country consequently soon became flooded with the most worthless and spurious trash imaginable, all purport- ing to be of real Spanish origin. There is considerable difference between a stub-twist and a wire-twist, or a stub-twist and a plain-twist. All twists are not Btub-twists ; neither is it necessary for all stub-barrels to be twisted barrels. Although there is a wide difference between all these WIRE-TWIST I&OK. 483 tenns, h is very usual for our dealers in guns, as well as sportB- men, to make little or no distinction in thdr applicaticm. Wf do not, however, wish to find fault with our hardwar^nen for the exhibition of such ignorance, when real, as they have hut few, if any, sources from which they can obtain such information as would set them right on these subjects, l^ere are, neT^rthdeBS, some importers as well as traders in guns among us who do know better than to impose upon their ignorant ca8t<«ier8 in the shame- fol manner in which they do, as they are well aware of the differ- ence in cost, workmanship,, and quality, between a genuine stub- twist and a wire-twist, and they should not boldly assert the one to be as good as the other, when th^ know what they say is hhe in every particular. Such conduct is very culpable, and more so when they are fully aware that the weapons they are selling are imperfect and often really dangerous to WIRK-TWIST IBOH. This is the next quality of iron used in the manufacture of barrels, and the mode of making the bar of wire-twist is thus de- scribed by Greener : — '' Alternate bars of irrai and steel are placed on each other in numbers of six each : they are thai finged into one body or bar ; after which, if for the making of wire-twist l»ar- rels, they are rolled down into rods of tfaree-dg^ths of an inch in breadth and varying in thickness according to the sixe of the bar- rel for which they are wanted ; if for Damascus, inTaiiaUy three- eighths of an inch square. When about to be twisted into sprab 484 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN. for barrels, care must be taken that the edges of the steel and iron shall be outermost, so that, when the barrel is finished and browned, it shall have the appearance of being welded of pieces the size of wires the whole length of the barrel." A little further on, our author remarks : — " The objection made to the wire-twist is that, owing to the iron and steel being perfectly separate bodies, run- ning through the whole thickness of the barrel, there is a difficulty in welding them perfectly, and of course there is a danger of its breaking across at any trifling imperfection. This objection is certainly well grounded, as many barrels break in the proving. I have myself seen a very strong barrel indeed broken across the knee without the slightest difficulty^ while to all appearances it was perfectly sound. This is the reason why the manufacturers have ceased to make them, except for the American trade,^^ It is well known that every description of gun-barrel made in England that is deemed of a very inferior quality — in fact, too dangerous to be manufactured into a gun at home — is shipped to our country for sale. The knowledge of this circumstance should make all sportsmen rather chary in the purchase of guns from the hands of those who, from ignorance or want of principle^ are ready to palm upon them any kind of a weapon, no matter how inferior or how dangerous. DAMASCUS BARRELS " Are pretty to look at, but they possess no advantage over the wire-twist barrels ; if any thing, they are inferior in strength and tenacity. The twisting which the barrels go through before they are welded together, for the purpose of forming into a barrel, in- stead of adding strength to the body of the metal, rather loosens the texture, by tearing asunder the parallel fibres, the close adhe- sion of which constitutes the power and strength of the metal.*' These barrels are made as follows: — "When about to be con- verted into Damascus, the rod is heated the whole length, and the two square ends put into the heads (one of which is a fixture) of a description of lathe, which is worked by a handle simiUr to a CHARCOAL IRON. 485 winch. It is then twisted like a rope, or, as Colonel Hawker says, wrung as wet clothes are, until it has from twelve to fourteen com- plete turns in the inch. By this severe twisting, the rod of six feet is shortened to three, doubled in thickness, and made perfectly round. Three of these rods are then placed together, with the inclinations of the twists running in opposite directions. They are then welded into one, and rolled down to a rod eleven-six- teenths of an inch in breadth." CHARCOAL IRON. This species of iron, we believe, is the kind of metal from which most of the guns imported into our country by hardwaremen are manufactured. When we say most of the guns, we mean most of the best guns, as there are thousands of guns made of still more inferior metal than charcoal iron, expressly for the American trade. These barrels are generally palmed off upon the ignorant as the real stub-twist; they are, however, far inferior to the genuine article. The metal is composed entirely of old iron without any admixture of steel, and therefore is greatly deficient in the strength or elasticity of either the stub or wire-twist. OTHER KINDS OF METALS. There are several other varieties of metals or compounds from which gun-barrels are manufactured for foreign trade ; they are generally far inferior even to charcoal iron, and are wanting not only in strength, but also in the tenacity and ductility so neces- sary for the making of an instrument which is intended to hold within bounds so dangerous and powerful a composition as gun- powder. Great numbers of these worthless weapons find their way to this country, and hundreds of individuals are crippled with them every year. A full description of all these metals will be found in Greener, as also a general exposi of all the deceptions carried on in the gun-trade. 486 lewis's AMERICAN SPORTSMAN, WOOD FOR STOCKING. Walnut is universally preferred in America for stocking ; it is abundant, strong, durable, and handsome, and therefore combines many, if not all, the qualities calculated to recommend it to the gunsmith. Its natural beauty is very much improved by staining, and many useful points under this head may be learned from Hawker. The following method, however, we meet with in Greener's work ; and, as we have tested its merits, we feel no hesita- tion in recommending it to our readers : — "After having got them (the stocks) dressed and sandpapered as fine as you possibly can for walnut, take a composition of unboiled linseed-oil and alkanet- root, in the proportion of four ounces of the latter to half a pint of oil. These, after being amalgamated for a week, will be of a beautiful crimson color, and will not fail to make walnut a hand- some brown, on being laid on three or four times with a sponge." Bird's-eye maple is also used for stocking, and is preferred by some to walnut on account of the greater beauty of its grain ; we, however, and most other sportsmen, consider it far inferior to walnut. Greener remarks that maple possesses less " conducting principle" than any other kind of wood, and therefore is well cal- culated to lessen the recoil, and on this account is best calculated for gun-stocks. Of this argument, however, we think very lightly, for the reason that no partridge-gun properly loaded should recoil with sufficient force to give a disagreeable shock, whether the stock be made of walnut, maple, or any other kind of suitable wood. The following method for staining maple, taken from the same source as the above, we have also used, — not on a gun-stocky how- ever, as we have no gun stocked with this description of wood ; but we tried it on some articles of furniture, and found it to answer a most excellent purpose, — in fact, imparting a beautiful and elegant appearance to the wood : — " Mix an ounce and a half of nitrous acid with about the same quantity of iron turnings or filings. After the gas which is created by the mixture has evaporated, take a piece of rag and dip it in WOOD 1*011 STOCKING. 487 the liquid left, and wet all parts of the stock you wish to stain. Let it stand until it is quite dry ; then lay on a slight coat of the oil and alkanet-root. Take a quantity of joiners* shavings : set fire to them, and pass the stock through the flame until it becomes quite black or the oil is quite burnt off. Re-sandpaper it, and you will find it, if possessing any figure, of a beautiful mottle. Add a few more coats of oil ; it is then ready for varnishing, or any other way you may fancy to have it finished." Maple stained in this way looks very beautiful, but we do not consider it either so handsome or so suitable for stocking as walnut ; it is much more brittle and knotty, and is liable to break if roughly handled. CHAPTER XXIX. THE ART OF COOKING GAME *' God sends meat:" — who sends cooks? Neqaaquam satis in re una consumere coram : Ut si quis soliim hoc, mala ne sint vina, laboret, Quali perfundat pisces securus olivo." 0 not imagine, brother sportsman, that we are going to dive into all the mysteries and complicated paraphernalia of a cookery- book, or, as a scientific gourmand, that we are about to extol alone the pleasures, the delights, and the joys, of a well-spread table. In extenuation, or rather in sup- port, of our trifling efforts to promote the happiness of our sporting friends when as- sembled around the convivial board with appetites made vigorous by the manly labors of the field, we beg to call their attention for a mo- ment to the sage remarks of the philosophic Rumford when speaking on this subject : — " The enjoyments which fall to the lot of the bulk 488 THE ART OF COOKING GAME. 489 of mankind are not so numerous as to render an attempt to increase them superfluous. And even in regard to those who have it in their power to gratify their appetites to the utmost extent of their wishes, it is surely rendering them a very important service to show them how they may increase their pleasures without destroy- ing their health." Dr. Mayo, in his "Philosophy of Living," also remarks that "man, unlike animals, is in best humor when he is feeding, and more disposed then than at other times to cultivate those amicable relations by which the bonds of society are strengthened." Who among our readers will not cheerfully acknowledge the force of such sentiments, emanating, as they do, from men of study, reflection, and practical observation ? "Who among them will not concede, in the fulness of his heart, that " a good dinner is one of the greatest enjoyments of human life"? Who ever knew of a philosopher refusing to participate in the festivities of a banquet ? And who ever encountered the still stranger sight of a disciple of Hippocrates living up to the dietetic precepts laid down for the guidance of his refractory patients ? Look around you on every side, ye carping cynics and snarling bigots, and see how many men of the greatest talents and rarest virtues, whether of the present day or of ages past, have sought pleasure in the innocent enjoyments of the table, and thus convince yourselves that these indulgences are not "incompatible with in- tellectual pursuits or mental superiority." Doctor Johnson, with all his wonderful attainments, did not consider a good dinner or a recherehi supper beneath his attention ; for we are informed by Boswell, his biographer, that "he never knew a man who relished good eating more than he did ; and when at table he was wholly absorbed in the business of the moment." The doctor himself says, in his usual quaint and philosophic style, ''Some people have a foolish way of not minding, or pretending not to mind, what they eat : for my part, I mind my belly very studiously and very carefully ; and I look upon it that he who does not mind his belly will hardly mind any thing else." 490 lewis's AMERICAN SPOtlTSMAN. How perfectly correct and natural do these remarks appear to us, when we reflect for a moment on the intimate sympathy and peculiarly direct communication existing between the head and the Btomach ! If the least irregularity in the natural functions of the bowels takes place, with what rapidity is it followed by a propor- tional degree of malaise at the very centre of life, — the brain ! In fact, the healthy operation of the whole natural economy is dependent in a great measure upon the state of the stomach ; but the brain watches the actions of this organ with a most jealous eye, and in most persons is the very first to strike the alarm at the presence of gross or badly-cooked food; and it has been most justly remarked that "he who would have a clear head must have a clean stomach,** If such be the fact, (and no one certainly will dispute it,) how necessary is it that we should not only regard the quality of our food, but that we should have an eye to the proper preparation of it by the cook before receiving it into so important an organ as the stomach ! We do not now address our remarks to those whose health is so robust, and whose habits and associations in life have been such as to force them to remain happy and contented with the coarsest fare, and whose stomachs consequently have attained the vigor of an ostrich or the capacity of an anaconda ; such in- dividuals, we know full well, would naturally accuse us of over- refinement and ridiculous nicety. Neither do we wish to encourage or uphold in their effeminate opinions those delicate and epicurean dandies who cannot enjoy a meal beyond the vile precincts of an eating-house or the luxurious saloons of a club-room, or whose pampered stomachs are never sated, save when tempted with all the niceties that the markets can produce, artistically concocted into savory stews^ outlandish fricandeaux, greasy ragoHts, hi^- sounding /W