LIBRARY UNiVE-S'.TY OF CALIFORNIA SAN OieSO 1822 01069 1012 loo W LIFE OF ALFRED NEWTON, M.A., F.R.S. PROFESSOR OF ZOOLOGY AND COMPARATIVE ANATOMY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, 1866-1907 Frontispiece. ALFRED NEWTON, M.A., F.R.S. LIFE OF ALFRED NEWTON PROFESSOR OF COMPARATIVE ANATOMY CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY, 1866-1907 BY A. F. R. WOLLASTON WITH A PREFACE BY SIR ARCHIBALD GEIKIE, O.M. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS NEW YORK E. P. BUTTON AND COMPANY 1921 NOTE WHEN in the spring of 1909 his literary executors paid me the compliment of asking me to write a "Life" of Professor Newton, I accepted the invitation with enthusiasm tempered by diffidence, little guessing the delays to which it would be subjected, and little know- ing the difficulties of the task. It became very soon apparent that the interests of so sedentary a life as that of Newton must be looked for principally in his letters. This led to the startling discovery that he had kept almost every letter he received during a period of more than fifty years, and to the further fact that a great many of his correspondents had preserved almost every letter that he had written to them. Searching through these thousands of letters was a work of several months ; and after that I was unavoidably occupied in New Guinea for a term of years. During these absences from England — and later during the war — I made attempts to induce others to complete the " Life," but without success. So it was not until 1920 that I was able to return to it. In the meantime the business of producing books, like all other things, has suffered a change, and the ample biographies of the spacious days before 1914 are no longer possible. Thus it happens that this volume has been reduced by nearly a half of its bulk, greatly to the advantage of the casual reader, if such vi NOTE there be, but, I fear, at the cost of some disappoint- ment to others who had hoped to see their interesting correspondence with Newton included in the book. In cutting down I have tried to act on the principle of preserving his best and most characteristic letters on whatever subject, rather than of including technically important matters, which are elsewhere accessible to naturalists. The help that I have received from Newton's friends and from members of his family has, I hope, been in every case gratefully acknowledged. There are two — Mr. James E. Harvie-Brown and Lord Walsingham — whose names must be recorded here : both of them have followed their old friend, but not before they had given me incalculable help in my attempt to preserve his memory. A. F. R. W. April, 1921. PREFACE THE subject of this volume, a man of strongly-marked personality, was for more than half a century a leader among the naturalists of this country, a distinguished Professor in the University of Cambridge, a prolific and accomplished writer, and a charming companion, whose geniality, humour, and innocent little whimsi- calities, drew around him a wide circle of friends. All who knew Alfred Newton will be glad that Mr. Wollaston, one of his pupils, should have put together this appreciative memoir. In so doing he has been fortunate in having had access to so large a number of the Professor's letters and journals as to give the chapters not a little of the character of an auto- biography. We see the future man of science entering Magdalene College, Cambridge, in 1848, as an undergraduate of nineteen. Six years later his youthful reputation gained for him, as the son of a Norfolk squire, election to the Norfolk Travelling Scholarship, with the aid of which he was enabled to make ornithological re- searches in Lapland and Iceland, and to visit the United States and the West Indies. These early journeys confirmed his bent towards the study of birds, and laid the foundation of his fame as one of the most eminent ornithologists of his day. He used to regret in later life that he had not travelled vii viii PEEFACE more. He was indeed a bom naturalist, and but for the lameness, which came from an accident in early boyhood, he would doubtless have become a dauntless pioneer in zoological regions as yet unexplored. Few bird-lovers could equal him in the quickness and sure- ness of eye which, even at a considerable distance, enabled him to distinguish a bird on the wing. The lameness, much increased by an accident in later years, greatly restricted the exploratory work which he might have achieved. It was most heroically borne by him, and was combated with two walking-sticks. He was too independent, however, to accept assistance if he could possibly do without it. In the yachting cruises which for some years I enjoyed in his company along the western coasts of Scotland, Ireland, and the Faroe Isles, he generally would land at every place of interest, even when a strong swell made it difficult to get into the boat. One could not but admire the tact with which he avoided the proffered hands of the crew, and his dexterity in the manipulation of his two sticks. His perfect coolness was remarkable on such occasions. He used to tell how once at Spitzbergen the dinghy slipped away before he had hold of the ship's ladder and he plumped into the water, but kept his pipe in his mouth, and so, as he said, lost nothing ! It was about 1863 that he made Cambridge his permanent home. In 1866 he was elected Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy in the Uni- versity. He then began at once with much ardour to improve the Zoological Museum, which in his hands became in the course of years one of the most important in the country. His kindly nature led him to take much interest in the undergraduates who showed a love of natural history. His "Sunday evenings" at Magdalene, when he received his students, academical PEEFACE ix friends, and any notable men of science who might be visiting Cambridge, were highly popular. Mr. Wollaston testifies to their value from the under- graduate point of view. Professor Newton was an indefatigable worker, never without some piece of scientific literature on hand, and often more than one. He was a keen critic of others, and not less of himself. He would write and re-write his compositions several times before they came up to his standard of arrangement and style. Above all he strove to secure accuracy in his own statements, and in his references and quotations. The pains taken by him with this object sometimes led to serious delays in the completion of his manuscript, which brought strong protests from the publishers, who had no sympathy with what they regarded as meticulous labour. If their complaints did not alter his habit, they at least filled him with indignation against the whole publishing tribe. Newton was a strong Conservative, instinctively opposed to the abrogation of any ancient usage. This resolute stand on the antiquas vias led him occasionally into whimsical positions, some of which are alluded to in the following chapters. Yet it is nevertheless true that he was one of the earliest naturalists in this country to accept Darwin's explanation of the origin of species. Not only did he receive with joy and admira- tion this momentous revolution in scientific thought, he actually made some effort to induce his brother naturalists to do likewise, but without success. The reader of the volume may, in some measure, appreciate the personal charm which endeared the Professor to those around him. His perennial bonhomie, his youthful enthusiasms maintained up to the last, his inexhaustible fund of anecdote and reminiscence, his x PREFACE unfailing good humour, his love of work, and his gener- ous co-operation in the doings of every fellow-worker who needed his help, together with the amusing pre- dicaments in which his conversation sometimes placed him, combined to make a rare and delightful person- ality, and underneath it all lay the solid and lasting service rendered by him to the branch of science to which he devoted his life. ARCHIBALD GEIKIE. TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER I CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL William Newton— His sons— Birth of Alfred at Geneva— Elveden Hall — Sport at Elveden — Accident in childhood — Affection for his brother Edward — Early interest in Natural History — School — First visit to Cambridge — Letters from school — Dogs and pets — Enters at Cambridge 1 CHAPTEB II EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY Magdalene — Takes degree — Norfolk Travelling Fellowship — Other naturalists — John Wolley — Wolley's experiences in Lapland — Sales of eggs — Newton goes to Lapland — Interest in northern faunas — Musk Ox— Breeding-place of Knot — Alfred Newton Glacier — Visit to W. Indies— Notes on Humming-birds— Visit to U.S.A.— J.H. Gurney 11 CHAPTEB III VISIT TO ICELAND Visit to Iceland— Lands in Faroe— The Meal Sack— Hospitality at Reykjavik — Learning Icelandic — Journey through Iceland — Streams of lava — Reykjanes — Submarine eruption — Habits of Great Auk— Failure of expedition 27 CHAPTEB IV THE GREAT AUK Extinction of Great Auk— History of the bird— Buying a Great Auk's egg — Its obscure history — Discovery of ten Great Auks' eggs — Gare-fowl book — Visit to Great Auk's breeding-places — Dodo and other extinct birds — Great Bustard — Acclimatisation and extermination " • . , . .40 xi Xll TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER V THE IBIS Origin of B.O.U.-Founders-Journal-Motto-Editorship of Ibis- Canon Tristram-Wolley's collections-" Ootheca Wolleyana —Memoir of John Wolley CHAPTER VI VISIT TO SPITZBERGEN Shooting in Denmark-Visit to Germany— Decides not to take holy orders— Prince Dhuleep Singh and Elveden— Visit to Spitzbergen— Voyage from Leith— Birds in Ice Sound— Snow Buntings — Eiders — Beindeer — Nordenskj old — Seals — Upset from boat— Fogs and calms— Bear Island and Hammerfest . 73 CHAPTER VII DR. SHIPLEY'S REMINISCENCES (Written by the Master of Christ's) Cambridge in the 'forties— Railway station— Magdalene in 1849 — Professor Adami — Francis Balf our — Adam Sedgwick — William Bateson— Newton's lectures— Hospitality— Character 93 CHAPTER VIII EARLY DAYS OF DARWINISM Early days of Darwinism — Newton's acceptance of theory — British Association at Oxford in 1860— Huxley and the Bishop of Oxford— Dr. Temple — Tristram's defection — Manchester meet- ing— Letter from Darwin — Zoological Record — Mendelism — Programme for Section D — Sclater and Louis Napoleon — Red Lions— Professorship of Zoology — Charles Kingsley . . .110 CHAPTER IX PROTECTION OF BIRDS Zoological aspect of Game Laws— Destruction of Sea-fowl — Close- time Committee — Bird Protection Bills and Acts — Letters to Lord Walsingham — Skuas— Protection of eggs— Protection of areas— Society for the Protection of Birds— Egg-collecting . 136 TABLE OF CONTENTS xiii CHAPTER X MIGRATION AND DISTRIBUTION PAGE Migration of birds— Letter of Scandinavian Poet— Newton's reply — Theories of migration — Torpidity and other superstitions — Gatke — Mr. Eagle-Clarke's observations at lighthouses — Destruction of life — History of migration— Aristotle and Pliny — Geographical distribution — Ptarmigan — Origin of life — Holarctic Region— A, B. Wallace— Address at Manchester . 160 CHAPTEB XI GILBERT WHITE AND OTHERS Gilbert White— Reviews of " Selborne "—Coleridge's Marginalia- Gilbert White's wig—" Selborne " a classic— Mr. Holt-White's "Life " — " Molly " letters — Mulso's letters — Thomas Bewick — — Willughby— Ray— Gould— F. Buckland— T. Edwards— R. Jefferies— H. Seebohm ........ 186 CHAPTEB XII METHODS OF WORK Accuracy — Care in identification — The Scaup Duck — Bustard — Great Black Woodpecker — Vipers swallowing young — Slow- ness in work — Yarrell's " British Birds " — Classification— Linnsean system — Nomenclature — Subspecies and trinomials . 207 CHAPTEB XIII LANGUAGES AND WORDS Correspondence with Professor Skeat — De Avosetta — Capercaillie — Mistletoe Thrush— Decoy- Okapi— No Snakes in Iceland . 220 CHAPTEB XIV WRITING AND CONSERVATISM Letter-writing— B. M. Cats.— Dedications— Zoological anecdote- Professor Babington and suet puddings — " Dictionary of Birds " — Publishers — Revisions — Style — Reviewers — The Cuckow — Philosophy — Politics and College politics — Mr. A. C. Benson's reminiscences — Bores— Interest in young naturalists . . 234 xiv TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTEE XV WORK AT CAMBRIDGE PAGE Lectures— Zoological training— Invertebrata— Jack Perkins and the Duke of Cambridge — Museum— Bos primigenius — Letters from Charles Kingsley— Special Board— Greek play—" Birds " of Aristophanes— Hospitality in College— The Old Lodge— Sunday evenings— Dr. Guillemard's recollections . . . 250 CHAPTEE XVI LATER YEARS Cornish Choughs— Heligoland and accident — Sir Archibald Geikie's account of cruises — St. Kilda and Orkneys — The song of the Shearwater — Death of Sir Edward Newton — The Professor in old age— Portraits— Honours— Last days — Death . . . 275 OHAPTEE XVII MISCELLANEOUS LETTERS . 293 APPENDIX LIST OF PUBLISHED PAPERS 316 INDEX . OQK LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PROFESSOR ALFKBD NBWTON Frontispiece SIR EDWARD NEWTON, K.C.M.G Facing page 62 THIRD BARON LILFORD , „ 120 CANON H. B. TRISTRAM, F.E.S „ „ 120 THE PROFESSOR. From a sketch by C. M. Newton . ,, „ 258 LIFE OF ALFRED NEWTON CHAPTER I CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL IP the boundary of the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk had not taken a sudden bend to the south near Thetford, so as almost to include the parish of Elveden, it is probable that the life of Alfred Newton, though it would undoubtedly have been the life of a man of distinction, would not have been the life of a naturalist. Fortunately for lovers of Natural History in general and of Orni- thology in particular, his father, as well as owning Elveden Hall in Suffolk, possessed also a small property on the other side of the boundary and was a Justice of the Peace for the county of Norfolk, so that at a critical point of his career Newton was able to establish his claim to be the " son of a Norfolk gentleman." William Newton, at one time M.P. for Ipswich, was the son of a planter, Samuel Newton of St. Kitts, in the West Indies, in the golden days of sugar, who lived in the island of St. Croix until he bought the Elveden estate in 1810 from the fourth Earl of Albemarle. He married (1811) Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Slater Milnes, M.P. for York, and aunt of Richard Monckton Milnes, first Baron Houghton, by whom he had six sons and four daughters. The eldest son, William Samuel, was one of the survivors of the Coldstream Guards at Inkerman, and retired with the rank of General. The second son, Robert Milnes, became Recorder of Cambridge and a Metropolitan Police Magistrate. Horace Parker was, B 2 CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL first of his year at the R.M.A., Woolwich ; he served with the Royal Artillery in the Crimea and retired with the rank of Major-General. The youngest son, Edward, K.C.M.G. (1832-97), was at one time Colonial Secretary of Mauritius and subsequently Colonial Secretary and Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica. Alfred was the fifth son of William Newton of Elveden. In 1828 Mr. Newton with his wife, seven children and a suitable retinue of nurses and couriers, drove in the leisurely fashion of those days from Elveden to Pisa in the family chariot. On their way back through Switzerland in the following year the family halted for a time at Geneva, where Alfred was born on June 11, 1829, at a house, " Les Delices," * which was at that time far beyond the limits of the town, but has now become surrounded by the growing suburbs of Geneva. In the next year they returned to Elveden, which continued to be the family home until after the death of Mr. Newton more than thirty years later. The Elveden Hall of those days was like many other East Anglian country houses, a plain Georgian mansion of brick, built about 1770 by Admiral Augustus Keppel, first and last Viscount Keppel of Elveden, upon whose death, in 1786, it passed to his nephew, the Earl of Albemarle. It is probable that there had never been an earlier house at Elveden, although the district had been renowned for centuries as one of the finest sporting countries in England. King James I. after visiting Newmarket in 1605, proceeded to Thetford, where he stayed for some time and was greatly struck by the * In Morley's " Voltaire " (chap, iv.) it is stated that Voltaire " made him- self a hermitage for the summer, called the Delices, a short distance from the spot where the Arve falls into the Rhone." This is without doubt the house in which Alfred Newton was born. One of his nephews writes : " The explanation why none of us should ever have heard about this before is that our elders considered Voltaire a horrible person whose name should never be mentioned by respectable people." SHOOTING AT ELVBDEN 3 quantities of game he saw there. He was with difficulty dissuaded from enforcing a dormant proclamation, which would have had the result of making the whole country a royal game preserve, but contented himself by claiming all the sporting rights over the country within twelve miles of Thetford and appointing a royal gamekeeper at a salary of two shillings a day. The same course was followed by his sport-loving successors, Charles I. and Charles II. In the early days of the nineteenth century, before the breech-loading gun had been invented, and when pheasant-rearing was yet in its infancy, the bags obtained at Elveden were not to be compared with the " records " of later years, but the sport there must have been as good as at any place in the kingdom. A bag which I believe had never been exceeded was made at Elveden in my father's time, 331 or 332 pheasants in one day, of which over 300 were cock birds, and not one of them reared by hand. This was in the " twenties," before I was born. It seems, too, that in those times game was less care- fully preserved and the boundaries of neighbouring estates were not so strictly marked as is the case now- adays. I have heard my father say that when he first went to Elveden, it was a common thing for a " gentleman " going from one country house to another to " shoot his way over," sending his servant and luggage by road, and that in particular in the autumn race meetings at Newmarket guests invited thence to stay at Euston made a habit of doing this, and he once found some distinguished persons pursuing a covey of Partridges on the Great Heath at Elveden. If anybody but a " gentle- man " had tried this on he would have found the custom very different. It was also customary for officers in the 4 CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL army, when changing quarters, to rove as they passed in search of game, and nobody said anything to them. You will find this mentioned in Col. Hawker's diary, but he, not being a gentleman, tried the same thing on when he was in quarters and there he found himself wrong. Although, judged by modern standards, the quantity of pheasants and partridges was not very great, there was ample compensation, to a naturalist, in the existence of several rare birds which still survived in the Elveden district. It is true that the Great Bustard was on the verge of extinction — the last of the native stock was killed in 1838— but Montagu's Harriers were fairly common in the fens near Feltwell, Buzzards still nested in some of the big woods, and Ravens bred every year at Elveden, where they survived until 1870. The vast warrens of the " Breck," the woods and water-meadows of the valley of the Little Ouse, and the neighbouring Fenland between them made an ideal training ground for a naturalist. The only detail that is known of Alfred Newton's childhood is an incident which affected profoundly the whole of his after life. When he was not more than five or six years old, he was playing some riotous game with one of his brothers in the library at Elveden and he fell and hurt one of his knees. Little importance was attached to it at first, but serious injury had been done and his right leg never grew equally with the other, causing him to be permanently lame. It may be that this accident prevented him from following his brothers' example and becoming a soldier, a career in which it may safely be said that he would have won certain distinction. But one very definite result which followed from his lameness was the encouragement it gave him in his earliest years to acquire habits of observation and contemplation. As time went on and he was debarred GUESTS AT ELVEDEN 5 to a great extent from the more active pursuits of his elder brothers, he came to rely more for companionship upon his younger brother, Edward. The affection — it might almost be called devotion — that Alfred and Edward had for each other was much more than is commonly seen between brothers, and it lasted unchanged until the death of the younger brother ten years before that of the elder. Edward's tastes were in many ways the same as those of Alfred, but though he was strong and active, he would do nothing that Alfred could not do, and it is said that as a child he wished that he might be lame too, so that they might, so to speak, " start fair." The two boys did everything together and were almost insepa- able ; the collection of birds and eggs was " ours," then- dogs were the joint property of both, and their records of observations were kept in notebooks labelled " A. and E. N." But it must not be supposed that he was debarred by his lameness from out-of-door amusements : he rode, and as a shot he was not much inferior to his brother Edward, who became afterwards one of the finest shots in England. Mr. Newton used to entertain many of his neighbours during the shooting season — the Newcomes from Feltwell, Lord March, George Hanbury, the Waddingtons from Cavenham, were frequent guests at Elveden. Another visitor was a " Mr. Bainbridge, a friend of my father's, who used to come and stay and on one occasion brought a bear pie ; we were very much annoyed because he did not bring the skull." In the summer the brothers were very much occupied with bird's-nesting, and they began to form their collection of eggs about 1840. About the same time, too, they began to keep the careful records of the migration of birds, which were continued, with only a few intervals, for twenty years. One of their " dodges " was to fill a 6 CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL pocket with gun-wads and as they walked about the woods and warrens at Elveden to transfer to another pocket one wad for each species of bird seen. In the evening they recorded their observations in an elaborate register,* and in this way they began to have some knowledge of the internal and local movements of birds as well as of the more conspicuous migrations of spring and autumn. From the keeping of birds in cages, which was naturally a feature of this period in their careers, they advanced to the more difficult business of keeping wild-fowl. The meres of Wretham and Stanford supplied them with several species of wild duck, with which they made experiments in hybridisation. More fortunate than the ducks, which often came to untimely ends, was a swan : "for the last six years I have had a Hooper, a most engaging bird — at times almost too familiar, for he invades the house, where his company is not always most agreeable." In 1844 Alfred went to Mr. Walker's school at Stetchworth, near Newmarket, and from this time dates his life-long correspondence with Edward. When they were in England the two brothers wrote to each other every day, and by every mail when they were abroad ; and each one kept carefully all the letters of the other. In early days they addressed each other by their pet-names, " Tafi " and " Tedge," but these were considered childish by their elders, and a more formal epistle was marked " for the family," while their own particular business was " not to be shown." School at Mr. Walker's was not very arduous, and holidays, which depended on the getting of so many marks, seem to have been frequent. Alfred often drove over to Elveden, a distance of about nineteen miles, for Sunday, and one .1 * A SP?01™611 page of this register was published in the Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Nat. Hist. Soc., 1871, vol. i. FIRST VISIT TO CAMBRIDGE 7 day in February, 1845, he went with his father to Cambridge. He wrote from Stetchworth on March 1 : — MY DEAREST TEDGE, I must give you a long letter concerning my doings at Cambridge. I spent my whole time, 3j hours, in the Museum of the Phil. Soc.* I took one of my old notebooks and a pencil and sketched the most striking of the birds, writing down by the side the colours, etc. The most beautiful British bird was the Indian Bee-eater, of which I send you a coloured drawing. I also send you a drawing of the Great Bustard, of which they have 4 specimens, 2 m. and 2 f . ; it is the most magnificent bird I ever saw except the Capercaillie, the colours of which were too difficult for me to draw. They have three specimens of the Otis tetrax, a very pretty bird. There is a magnificent Golden Eagle. I am now quite certain that our bird is the Linota montium and not Linota cannabina. Our Redpoll is also a (young) male bird and, of course, it retains its immature plumage. The birds are, with the exception of a few old specimens, very well stuffed. A word now about the eggs, which are not much, the Falco peregrinus and Otis tarda being the lions ; I was much disappointed with that part of the Museum. I was surprised at not seeing a specimen of the Regulus ignicapellus there, as Mr. Jenyns is the premier with regard to the Nat. Hist, department. They have a few works on Nat. Hist., most presented by their authors. Audubon's " American Ornithology " is a daub. The " Nat. Hist, of the Voyage of H.M.S. Adventurer and Beagle," is a beautiful book. There is also a book by the author of " Taxidermy," on Freshwater Fishes, coloured by hand. I was rather disappointed in seeing the Kittiwake there, for unless it is an adult male in breeding plumage (which is snow-white) I don't think it is a very handsome bird. It is now quite dark, so good-bye, dearest Tedge. I am your most affectionate brother, TAFF. * House in All Saints Passage, now the Hawks Club. 8 CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL The notebook still exists and the drawings that he made that day are remarkable for their accuracy and for the skill with which he emphasised the most characteristic features of the birds drawn. He was always very fond of drawing, and although he never possessed very great skill as an artist, his drawings, whether of birds, beasts or landscapes, were invariably accurate. Many of his letters are full of drawings and later, when he was abroad, he illustrated the incidents of his travels with very humorous sketches. The following letter was illustrated with an excellent drawing of a Brambling : — Stetchworth, Friday, March 7, 1845. MY DEAREST TEDGE, I dare say you will like to hear how my Brambling * is. He is perfectly well and is, (considering that he was only caught yesterday) very tame, much more so than Skelly [a Starling] is now. He goes on picking about while I am standing at the cage. I have given you a little sketch of Brammy's head, but I can't describe his markings they are so beautiful. There were 5 caught (in a clap net), 2 m. 3 f. ; the 3 unfortunate females were sent to Ditton with about 100 other birds for a shooting match and were shot. The other male bird fluttered itself to death in the store cage and was roasted and eat before I knew of it. They are called here north-cocks. The man who caught them is going out again to-morrow and so I trust I shall be able to get some more. He caught some redpolls and reed sparrows, etc., so I can probably get some. His prices are very reason- able, 1 d. or $d. for each bird. The reason I gave Qd. for mine is that the man's little girl had picked it out of the others for its beauty and had taken a great fancy for it. I have not got a very secure cage for him, but I keep * Fringilla montifringilla — Beak yellow, tip black ; nape snow white, ear coverta black with green reflexions ; throat pale crimson-tawney, a round white spot in the middle of the neck ; the rest of the head mottled black and white. DOGS AND PETS 9 him covered up and he does not try to get out ; I am trying to borrow a cage. Many thanks for your letter. When do you expect to get a siskin ? Thank Car for her line, I must write to her in a day or two. I shall get the holiday to-morrow as I have now got down 76 marks. Love to all with Willy.* I am yr. affecte. brother, TAFF. In many of his letters and, very likely, in his personal behaviour to his brother, Alfred adopted very much the attitude of the elder brother when they were boys ; he was constantly correcting small mistakes in Edward's letters and condemning any tendency he might have towards making exaggerated statements. It was a useful training for the younger boy, who learnt early to make careful observations and became an excellent field- naturalist, " better than the best gamekeeper and as good as a warrener," as Alfred said of him in later days. As well as ponies and ducks and other animals they kept dogs, " Crab " and " Wasp," and often a family of puppies. Alfred used to say that he was always very " doggy," but in after years, when he no longer lived in the country, he thought it was not kind to keep one in a town. When " Crab " died, he wrote to his brother from Stetchworth, on May 3, 1845 :— Poor Crab, I can do nothing but lament over his death, in fact I can hardly believe it. Pray save some of his hair, and have him buried honourably in the garden as near the poor old pony as possible. I am now so excessively sorry that I did not sketch his head when I was last at home. I will certainly do the others directly I go back. There is certainly a fatality attending the Wasps. How many puppies are left ? * Their nurse, Williamson. 10 CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL I think you have made some mistake as to the arrival of the Himndinidw at Elden.* You have written to me that both Swallow and House Martin arrived at Elden on April 4. May I be allowed to say you have never before mentioned on what day the Crow nidificated, and there- fore I don't see how you can have written it to me 500,000,000,003 times. You never have said whether you have a hooded crow's claw for me, if not, do you know of any old one, as I have not got one ? The Eedbacked Shrike arrived this morning. I have been to the Dyke. I found a redbreast's nest with 5 eggs, I took one. Malcolm found a pheasant's, which of course we cribbed. This is "en particulier." I went to try to get a Longtailed tit's egg for Reynolds but alas ! ! ! I bought a female wryneck alive to-day for 6d. She is very tame, sits on my finger and runs ants thro' with her long tongue. She has been caught only two days. The boy won't tell me how he caught her I really can't write any more. I will write to my sisters to-morrow. Believe me, Dearest Edward, Yr. most affecte. brother, ALFRED. The letter is illustrated with an admirable sketch of the wryneck sitting on his finger and eating ants. In 1846 he went for a few months to a tutor, the Rev. Joseph Homer, vicar of Everton, near Biggleswade in Bedfordshire, and in October, 1848, he entered as a pensioner at Magdalene College, Cambridge. * Elveden used to be pronounced Elden. CHAPTER II EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY MAGDALENE in the " forties " was a small college, and very little is known of Newton's undergraduate days. He twice won the College prize for an English essay,* and it is said that on one occasion he coxed a winning four. The only other event that is known of this period is that he assisted his friend Charles Pierrepont Cleaver and two or three other undergraduates in executing a painted window for the College Chapel. In his second year he was elected a member of the Pitt Club, which he con- tinued to use as a convenient place for writing letters during more than half a century. Although he was a very fair classical scholar when he went up to Cambridge, the Classical Tripos, which in those days was only open to men who had already taken honours in Mathematics, did not appeal to him. The Natural Sciences Tripos was then in its infancy (the first examination was held in 1851), but he was not attracted by Chemistry and Physics, which were the most important subjects in the school at that time. He made the acquaintance of Henslow, the famous Professor of Botany, and long enjoyed his friendship ; his tastes, however, already inclined him strongly towards the other branch of Biology, and he regretted afterwards that he had never become even a passable botanist. He graduated on March 10, 1852, but as that day fell after Ash Wednesday he was in the phraseology of the day a Baccalaureus * His nephews and nieces founded an " Alfred Newton English Essay Prize " at Magdalene in order to perpetuate his memory there. 11 12 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY Artium ad Baptistam, and consequently, by the regula- tions then in force, was reckoned as a bachelor of 1853. " In 1697 the Rev. Drue Drury bequeathed to Magda- lene College the perpetual advowson of the vicarage of Steeple Ashton, Wilts, and the impropriate parsonage of the said place, to found a Travelling Fellowship for a 'gentleman's son of Norfolk.' In 1847 the value of the Fellowship was £366 gross, £268 net." * Owing to the fortunate circumstance mentioned above of Mr. Newton holding the commission of the peace for Norfolk, although a resident in Suffolk, and thanks to the good offices of the then Master, George Neville- Grenville (appointed Dean of Windsor in the same year), Alfred Newton was elected in the spring of 1853 to the Drury Travelling Fellowship, which happened to be vacant. Unfortunately the church at Steeple Ashton was sadly in need of repair at that time ; funds were diverted to pay the cost of restoring the chancel, and the slender emoluments of the Travelling Fellow compelled him to stop at home. He stayed in residence at Cam- bridge until the autumn of 1854, when he went to Elveden, which was his home until the place was sold in 1863 after the death of his father. For some years now he had been corresponding on Natural History subjects, chiefly ornithological, with naturalists all over the country ; among these may be mentioned Yarrell, Gould, J. H. Gurney, and Sir William Jardine, to whom he had become known through his contributions to the pages of the Zoologist. But his most important correspondence was with John Wolley. The two men had been corresponding for some three years, and in October, 1851, Wolley first called on Newton in his rooms at Cambridge, after which their acquaintance ripened into a firm friendship. Wolley's work was * From " Magdalene College," by E. K. Parnell. (F. E. Robinson & Co.) JOHN WOLLEY 13 destined to have so profound an influence on that of Newton, that a short account of his life may fittingly be given here. He was the eldest son of the Rev. John Wolley, afterwards vicar of Beeston, Notts, and was born in 1824. From Eton, where he spent six years, he went to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1842. He graduated in 1846 and in 1847 he went to Edinburgh, where he studied medicine for three years. His vaca- tions were devoted to the pursuit of Natural History, and on his egg-collecting expeditions he gained a remark- able familiarity with the most remote districts of the British Islands. John Wolley's more important travels and ornitho- logical discoveries may be told in Newton's words : — * He left England for the North in April, 1853. He had become persuaded from careful consideration of many facts that the country between the head of the Gulf of Bothnia and the Arctic Ocean must be the breeding place of many birds whose homes were unknown. He was delayed both at Gottenburg and Stockholm by the difficulty of getting local information, and was finally compelled to start knowing very little of what was required. He went up with the Spring, instead of being beforehand with it, and his progress was slow. When he got to Muonioniska he found himself too late for the eggs of the Birds of Prey, and I now have the hatched-out shell of a Rough-legged Buzzard's egg, which was the only bit of such a common species as that which he procured. In those days no one in England had an authenticated egg of that bird. It was the same with Cranes and many others. Siberian Jays (the eggs then quite unknown) had hatched out long since. He got a single nest of Temminck's Stint and some 4 or 5 Jack-Snipes' (both unknown in England), about as many nests of Broad-billed Sandpiper, but that had before * Letter to J. A. Harvie-Brown, April 7, 1874. 14 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY been found. In Ducks he did better, but altogether his results were meagre. However, he was anything but discouraged. He resolved to winter in the country and visit every house within a large district to make inquiries and invite people to supply his wants. This he did most effectually, and the following year he had Gyrfalcons', any number of Buzzards', Shore Larks', and many other valuable eggs of his own taking. Still Pine Grosbeak, Siberian Jay, and above all Waxwing, all escaped him. He came home for 6 weeks in August, 1854, and then returned for another winter, working as before. In 1855 he pushed on to the Varanger, and then Hudleston and I joined him. With him as our pioneer we did very fairly, and returning home by Muonioniska we found Siberian Jay and Pine Grosbeak had been obtained. The winter of 1855-6 he was at home ; in spring of /56 he went to (Eland and Gottland,* which proved a failure, and then pushed on to Muonioniska, where the great discovery of Waxwing had just been effected. There he wintered, again in spring made a fresh incursion to the Varanger— or very near it — got Buffon's Skua, and finally Smew. Then he returned home, keeping up an active correspondence with people in Lapland. In 1858 he went to Iceland. Then his health gave way and in 1859 he died. Still his seed bore fruit, and Snowy Owls' eggs came to me in 1860 or /61 — I forget which. I believe that not one half of his successes would have been attained but for his persistently wintering in Lapland and getting to know all the people of the country. At the same time I am not going to say that for you it would be necessary to winter in the Petchora. You have fewer objects to attain and this extreme measure may not be necessary. Grey Plover, Little Stint, Curlew Sandpiper, and Bewick's Swan and Steller's Duck alone demand your chief attention. He had not only all these to inquire about, but twice as many besides. * " Led astray by a statement of Westerland that he had found Larus rmmdiis breeding in (Eland, he wasted a season there ; otherwise he would most likely have been on the scene when the Waxwing discovery was made. BIKD'S-NESTING IN LAPLAND 15 Wolley's letters from Scandinavia attracted Newton strongly, and the fauna of northern countries always interested him, perhaps, more than that of any other region. Wolley was an extremely accurate and careful observer, who accepted nothing on hearsay evidence, with the result that his collections gained greatly in value from the complete authenticity of every specimen. The following extract from one of his letters * shows something of his energetic and painstaking nature and at the same time gives a description of bird-hunting in Lapland, which is as true to-day as it was in his time. To find the marsh birds' nests it is useless to be alone ; the population here is very scanty, and just the fortnight that the birds have eggs every man, woman and child is busy with his own affairs, and laying in everything he will want for a long winter, so that it was very difficult to get any one. I had to pay high wages to the people who went with me to the marshes, and besides to give them two or three bits of silver for every egg they found. I worked night and day, often up to my middle in mud and water, under a scorching sun or in drenching rain, amidst clouds of gnats of a most greedy and venomous kind, which made the night more unpleasant than the day. To manage ten or twelve persons, beaters, etc., is no easy thing when you are well used to them and they to their business, but when all your men are quite unused to the kind of thing, when your Swedish companion can- not understand your expressions, such as " take a beat," " quarter the ground," " keep the line," when he has to repeat these to a Finnish interpreter and he again to explain them to the natives, and when after all you have to make these natives follow the explanations, it is both difficult and fatiguing and involves great loss of time. Then the places frequented by the birds one want are few and far between. The people do not know the kinds, * Dated, July, 186a 16 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY and one had no clue at first to the local names. At one time I am told of a place, 7 or 8 miles off, where there are many wading birds ; going there with full forces I find there are certainly many Curlews. Another time I hear of a famous lake, 20 miles off, renowned over the country for birds ; every bird I ask for is to be found there ; coming to it I find scarcely anything : it is an autumnal rendezvous for Ducks and Geese. Mosquitoes, fleas, bugs, midges, dirty houses, no bed- clothes, no bread, sour milk, reindeer flesh raw and as hard as a board, are not luxuries. If you want to wash they bring you the same little sour bowl out of which you drink. All these little things make a bird-nesting ex- pedition here very different from one when one leaves a comfortable English house in the morning to return to it in the evening. I find myself lose strength and spirits, so that it requires some resolution to continue my exertions. Now, however, I am in excellent winter quarters, a clean house, capital cook, and every necessary, and if I were to remain here next summer I should do much more in the bird-nesting way, from the benefit of experience both as to names, localities, and habits, besides as to the best mode of keeping oneself in health and spirits in the wilderness. But I think of going to Spitzbergen. I am informed that a vessel goes from Hammerfest occasionally to hunt reindeer and kill walruses there. In the winter I propose to drive my pulka with my swift-footed rein over to Alten and make inquiries, and if I find it feasible, I shall certainly try what I can do in Spitzbergen. It was the custom in those days for ornithologists to attempt to defray part of the cost of their travels by selling some of their duplicate specimens of skins and eggs. Newton undertook to dispose of Wolley's speci- mens, and the annual sales at Stevens' Auction Rooms of the rarities from Lapland were events which attracted a crowd of naturalists from all over the country. There; SALES OF EGGS 17 was very keen competition among collectors to secure specimens of the newly-discovered species, and high prices were obtained for the eggs of the Waxwing, Pine Grosbeak, Siberian Jay, etc. : thus £5 105. was paid for the first egg of the Waxwing, £4 5s. for an egg of the Pine Grosbeak, and 25s. for a single egg of the Siberian Jay. Greatly exaggerated rumours went about concerning the profits made by these sales. The total amount realised by Wolley's seven sales from 1853 to 1859 did not exceed £940, and it is safe to say that the cost of obtaining the specimens greatly exceeded that sum. In 1860, after Wolley's death, Newton held another sale of a large number of his duplicate specimens ; the sum amounted to about £200, which he devoted to the publication of the first part of the catalogue of Wolley's collection, the " Ootheca Wolleyana." It was in 1855 that Newton made his only journey to Lapland. With his friend W. Hudleston Simpson * he crossed the North Sea from Hull to Christiania at the end of May. It blew half a gale and the ship, " being much impeded by a railway carriage in the fore part of the deck," made only four and a half knots an hour, but Newton alone of all the passengers suffered not at all. From Christiania the railway extended at that time only as far as Eidswold, and thence they drove to Trondhjem in carrioles, being accompanied a part of the way by one of the earliest mountaineers in Norway, Blackwell,t with the Chamonix guide, Gideon Balmat. By covering the last hundred miles into Trondhjem in twenty-eight hours they arrived just in time to take passage in the weekly mail steamer to Hammerfest. As they went northward up the coast all the days and most of the nights were * Afterwards W. H. Hudleston, F.R.S. ; died 1909. t Eardley J. Blackwell : made one of the earliest ascents of the Wetterhorn in 1854. C 18 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY spent on deck in noting birds new to them and in admira- tion of the fantastic beauty of the Lofotens. At Ham- merfest they were delayed by gales and snowstorms for twelve days, which they spent in the very uncomfortable inn of that unattractive town. On June 16 they passed the North Cape, and two days later, after visiting Homo, which was then hostile territory (being in the Province of Archangel), they landed at Vadso. On the 19th they were joined by Wolley, who had just returned from his expedition to Lake Enare and the Patsjoki, where he had discovered the nest of the Hooper.* He brought with him a couple of young Sea-Eagles alive and a train of Jays and Grouse, as well as a mass of bones, skins, feathers, down, and so forth. Beside the precious Swan's eggs, he had brought very many more, and the children of Vadso were waiting for him with all the eggs they had collected for him during the season, so the three men set up blowing eggs until five o'clock in the morning, and it is not surprising to learn that the baker's house (where they stayed) seemed to have been turned into a poulterer's shop. In a day or two lodgings were found for Wolley's live birds, and the party then set off in boats up the Varanger Fjord, where they remained for a month. They did not attain the principal object of their search, the breeding place of Buffon's Skua, but they succeeded in finding the nests of many rare and interesting birds. Newton and Simpson were the first Englishmen to find and identify the eggs of the Red- throated Pipit (Anthus cervinus), and they obtained many others that were new to them, such as Red-necked Phalarope, Temminck's Stint, Bluethroat, Velvet Scoter, Turnstone, Shore Lark, and others. They made an expedition to the Tana River, where Simpson caught * J.W.'s very graphic account of this discovery may be read in " Ootheca Wolley ana," vol. ii. p. 495. JOURNEY THROUGH LAPLAND 10 salmon, whilst Newton accused himself of being the only Englishman who ever visited that famous river without the desire to cast a fly. After investigating the remarkable raised beaches of the Varanger Fjord, they returned to Hammerfest and thence went by steamer up the Lyngen Fjord to Skibotn. That region had been very seldom visited by Englishmen in those days, and their journey across the peninsula to the Gulf of Bothnia was considered a very creditable feat.* After crossing the watershed they found boats awaiting them at Kilpis-jarvi, and in these they descended the Muonio River to Wolley's headquarters at Muonio- vara. Nearly a month was spent in collecting and pack- ing the eggs which Wolley's collectors had obtained for him. Newton traversed the famous swamp — no light undertaking for a lame man — to see the spot where the first Crane's nest had been discovered two years before and Simpson had good sport with the wild-fowl with which the Muonio abounds. In September they con- tinued their journey in boats down the river to Hapa- randa, whence they returned by way of Stockholm to England. Though he was able only once to visit Lapland, Newton always spoke of it as a sort of ornithological paradise, and years afterwards, as the present writer can gratefully testify, he was ready to help and advise younger naturalists who proposed to follow in his steps. When Mr. Harvie-Brown returned from a Norwegian trip in 1871, he advised him to go farther east into a country which at that time was almost unknown territory to naturalists. I met Mr. Alston in London and was very glad to find * An excellent account of this part of their journey was written by Simpson for Fraser's Magazine, April, 1856. 20 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY you and he had enjoyed your trip to Norway so much. I hope you will go again to the North, but pray take my word for it that if you only reach a good high altitude, the further eastward you go the more you will get. I believe the land of promise for an oologist is in N, Finland between the Kemi River and the White Sea. Anything I can do to further your explorations in that direction you can entirely command. East Finmark is nearly as well known as the Scottish Highlands, you might get something new there just as you might in the Highlands, but the chances are greatly against it. Northern Finland is quite an untouched country. The Snow Bunting ought to be found without diffi- culty in Scotland. I never had any trouble in marking a bird to her nest.* Three years later Harvie-Brown had an opportunity of taking Newton's advice, and planned to go farther east still to the Petchora. I am delighted to find that the Petchora scheme is coming off and I envy you not a little. The only species I can add to your prospective bill of fare is Bewick's Swan. That and the Curlew Sandpiper seem to me the most urgent of the desideratissima with which you are likely to fall in, and I would beseech you to spare no trouble about them, and not to be discouraged if you do not get eggs this year, provided you can only ascertain that these species breed there. Remember how Wolley worked for years in faith and was rewarded at last. You will, I am afraid, find it a very hard expedition, and I hope you will not knock up under the miseries of hunger and cold. The Samoieds are now I dare say peaceable enough, but in the days when Wolley was thinking of going to the Petchora they were reported by the Russians to be very savage. I don't know that anything on the fauna of the country has ever been published, certainly * Letter to J. A. Harvie-Brown, October 28, 1871. MUSK OX 21 there is no zoology that I could ever find in Keyserling's " Reise nach Petchora Land," so that all ought to be interesting and I trust you will make copious notes for at least a paper in the Ibis, if not for a book. It would be well to study carefully the diagnostic characters of Bewick's Swan before you go, so that you may know it from the Hooper through your glass, if you cannot get near enough to shoot it. Curlew Sand- piper with its white rump and red head and neck is unmistakable, but a breeding plumage skin to show the natives would not be a bad thing to take with you.* Persons voyaging to Polar Seas were always appealed to by him to bring back specimens for the Museum, and among them was his friend Colonel (then Major) H. W. Feilden, who served on board H.M.S. Alert in Nares' Expedition of 1875-6. When the proceeds of the German Arctic Expedition were sold at Bremen some time ago we bought a skeleton of a Musk Ox (bull) supposed to be perfect ; the money was paid and some time elapsed before it was overhauled — then we found that the bones of the left metacarpus were wanting ! Can you then among other things secure us an Extra left fore leg of a Musk Bull, if you fall in with any ? N.B. — Anything, I am sure, pertaining to Ovibos — even the dung in a bottle — would be most valuable, as the poor beast is not long for this world. I do wonder if this next month will see you cut the Knotty tangle, f The " knotty tangle " was the question of the possible discovery of the hitherto unknown breeding-place of the Knot. Newton had been chaffed by a writer in the Saturday Review because he had suggested that Knots might be found breeding on green meadows near Smith Sound. He begged Feilden to help him out of the scrape, * Letter to J. A. Harvie-Brown, March 28, 1874. t Letter to H. W. Feilden, June 21, 1875. 22 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY and before the expedition sailed he gave him as a parting present a knife with the following inscription : — HOC FERRO NB MODO ALEXANDRI SED ALEXANDRI PRECEPTORIS SECETUR NODUS * HENRICO WEMYSS FEILDEN POLUM PETENTI. A.N. * What the Knot is requires no explanation to an Ibis. As a matter of history, it may be recorded that the breeding-place of the Knot was discovered during the course of that expedition. In July an old bird accom- panied by three nestlings was obtained near the Alert on Grinnell Land, in 82° 33' N. latitude ; and in the same month Mr. Chichester Hart, naturalist to H.M.S. Discovery, obtained in 81° 44' N. latitude a brood of four young birds, disturbed from the nest. So the Knotty tangle was cut. By way of recognition of Newton's services to the Expedition, in advice to the naturalists and care of the specimens they obtained, a newly discovered glacier was named after him by Admiral Sir George Nares. The Alfred Newton Glacier discharges into the sea on the west side of Smith Sound in 78° 30' N. latitude, between the north entrance of Baird Inlet and Leconte Island. " The compliment paid me by Nares' Expedition is certainly a great one, though one can hardly look on a glacier as a very abiding monument, and it suggests a cold and grinding disposition which I hope is not mine." f In 1857 Newton went to the West Indies and visited the islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas, in the former of t Letter to A. C. Smith, March 26, 1879. HUMMING-BIRDS 23 which one of his brothers, Francis Rodes, was living. He made many interesting observations on the birds of the islands and afterwards, with his brother Edward, contributed a valuable paper on the Birds of St. Croix to the first volume of the Ibis. He was strongly attracted by the beauty of the tropical fauna, which he saw then for the first time — I think it is quite worth crossing the Atlantic to see Humming-birds. No pen can describe and no pencil depict the suddenness with which the little fairy appears before you, the rapidity with which, on wings whirring like a cotton mill, he visits flower after flower, and then when you least expect it, away he shoots in pursuit of a rival. All this while (about thirty seconds) you are holding your breath for fear of blowing him away. However, his glittering feathers are quite unseen by men on such occasions ; one may catch a glimpse of their sheen when he happens to mount aloft on a dead tama- rind bough and draw his primaries through his mandibles, but then it just depends upon whether he and you are relatively in the right position for the light.* An interesting note relating to Humming-birds is recorded in a letter written to his brother : — I think the only other ornithological occurrence of interest that I have met with is that the other day I saw a Humming-bird fairly caught in a spider's web. The bird came into my room and went furiously spinning round and round the ceiling; at length it touched a pretty big spider's web, and was quite powerless. The net was, luckily for the bird, an old, deserted one and very much tattered ; therefore after hanging for some seconds, if not minutes, a series of violent struggles released it. I caught the bird subsequently and found its feathers quite bound up with the web. It has been often asserted by the old writers that Humming-birds * Letter to T. Southwell, December 8, 1857. 24 EARLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY get caught in spiders' webs, and as often doubted. Gosse declares that he is sure that no web could ever for a moment stop the flight of any, even the least, species of Humming-bird ; now here I have proof positive to the contrary. It might be said that the bird was already fatigued by its attempts to get out of the room ; but then it must be remembered on the other hand that the web was an old one, deserted and in rags ; had it been in good order I much question whether the bird could have escaped. From the West Indies Newton went to New Orleans, and thence to Boston and New York, where a serious illness prevented him from carrying out an extensive tour in the United States and Canada. But his visit to America, though it was never repeated, gave him a cordial liking for American men and institutions, and it was the beginning of an acquaintance with the leading naturalists of the country, Agassiz, Baird, Coues, and many others, with whom he kept up a life-long corre- spondence. Another circumstance connected with this journey is that he had the satisfaction of " teaching young America how to blow eggs." Instead of the old method of blowing eggs with two holes, he explained to them the use of the drill and blowpipe, by means of which the contents are removed through a single hole in the side of the egg. His paper, entitled " Suggestions for Forming Collections of Birds' Eggs," was published in their Miscellaneous Collections by the Smithsonian Institution, in 1860. Even when he was most busily occupied, Newton always found time to write to an ever-increasing number of friends in England and elsewhere, to make arrange- ments for the annual meeting of ornithologists and to negotiate exchanges of specimens and so on. One of his VISIT TO AMERICA 25 most intimate friends and frequent correspondents was H. B. Tristram,* who had just at this time returned from a very successful expedition to Algeria. Boston, September 1, 1857. MY DEAR TRISTRAM, I can only afford you just time enough and this scrap of paper to express my exultation at your safe return from the most unprecedented campaign that Algeria has ever been the theatre of. The glories of African generals of all nations and times sink to nothing when compared with yours ; Sesostris, Marius, Alexander, Menon, Abercromby, with all the moderns, Bugeaud, Sir Harry Smith, and Pelissier, are nobodies. Moses only spoiled the Egyptians, but to have carried off such a booty under the noses of French naturalists is a much greater triumph, and the Algerians seem to me to have expiated all their past cruelties to Christian slaves by the way they have assisted you. In the plenitude of your wealth, however, I hope you will not forget one who on whichever side of the Atlantic and the Tropic of Cancer he has been, has been always wishing for your success ; not, though, that I can offer you anything more like "reciprocity" than that which under the same name Brother Jonathan holds out to the Blue-nosed fishermen. But I am one of those who will readily hoard up quicquid de Libycis verritur areis. I have seen Dr. Brewer and his collection, of neither is much to be said ; the Dr. is reserved to an astonishing degree for a Yankee, and has evidently never enjoyed anything like those glorious days of last September when you met me at Cambridge, the memory of those talks de omnibus ambits, etc., has cheered me many a time for the last eight months, when with the exception of two hours with Downs at Halifax (a real out and outer) I have not met with a soul who could converse on the subject. His collection is ex- tremely moderate considering the scope of it and what * Canon of Durham, D.D., F.R.S. : died 1906. 26 EAKLY INTEREST IN NATURAL HISTORY must have been great opportunities, the only egg I coveted a Hooded Merganser's, of which you have one. What is to be done about an Oological conference this year ? You will be the great difficulty, or rather I should say the time and place that will suit you. I trust sincerely your health is better. Yours most truly, ALFRED NEWTON. Another of Newton's early correspondents, and later a life-long friend, was John Henry Gurney, of Norwich. From 1844, when they became acquainted by means of a Sea Eagle, until Gurney 's death in 1890, they kept up a frequent correspondence, mostly about birds of prey, of which Mr. Gurney's famous collection is now in the Norwich Museum. He was also a generous contributor to the Museum at Cambridge. CHAPTER III VISIT TO ICELAND IN the year following his first visit to the West Indies Newton went with John Wolley to Iceland. He had for a long time cherished the idea that the Great Auk, or Gare-fowl as he always preferred to call it, might still survive on some of the skerries off the coast of Iceland. Wolley, always enthusiastic, was very sanguine of success, and in the spring of 1858 they resolved to put their theory to the test. The story of their journey is told in two letters to Edward Newton : — Reykjavik, May 2, 1858. I left Elveden on April 20, and reached Edinburgh on the 21st, where I found Wolley just arrived and in good force. The next morning we got off about 9.30. A perfectly calm day, warm for the time of year, but misty ; the Firth of Forth like glass ; some common sea- birds about but not many, besides Velvet Scoters and Gannets. At sun-down, 8 p.m., we were north of Aber- deen. The next morning (being off the Pentland Firth) was just as still, and we made good speed ; towards afternoon we sighted Fair Island, lying between Orkney and Shetland, and soon after saw the lighthouse on N. Ronaldshay, the land being invisible ; later still we sighted Foula, which we only lost about dark. Only common sea-birds about. On the 24th I saw Fulmars from my port-hole window before I was up. A few "Wheatears joined us and a couple of Pipits appeared. About 1 p.m. we made Sudero, one of the Faroerne ; before long we encountered two Great Skuas — the first I 27 28 VISIT TO ICELAND had ever seen — and soon after four dropped anchor at Thorshaven, the capital. Here we landed a good many passengers, for we had so far been rather inconveniently crowded ; among them the Stiftsampteraand or Governor, whose arrival was the cause of a deal of gunning. Wolley and myself went ashore wth the mails, consisting of twenty letters (the first post received this year from Denmark). We walked about and viewed the town and suburbs. All the houses are covered with grass, but such as we entered seemed comfortable. They are built with- out the slightest reference to the inequalities of the ground, but with regular though extremely narrow streets. We found the people sowing their barley, turn- ing up the ground with an instrument, the inventor of which must have had a marrow-spoon in his mind which he enlarged to the dimensions of a cricket bat. Spade it can hardly be called ; yet even this elaborate imple- ment is not required in reality, for there being little or no subsoil in Fsero, about an inch and a half is as much as seems to be dug up. All the male population seem dressed in uniform, a brown homespun loose jacket, some- times with silver buttons ; a striped woollen cap, the end hanging down ; knee breeches, worsted stockings and shoes without soles, built on the lines of a moccasin or a Turkish slipper. One of the Sysselmaand, Miiller by name, is a great " pal " of Wolley 's and he entertained us to supper before we left, which we did about midnight, the moon and the high latitude between them making it quite light. On shore we only saw some Hooded Crows, a Wheatear and Golden Plover. As we left Fsero we got a tolerable Atlantic roll which continued increasing for the rest of our voyage. We now found our party reduced considerably, not only by the desertion we had experi- enced at Faero (one of whom was a most extraordinary- looking German Professor, whose week-old beard and bear-like projecting snout did him with a most grotesque expression endue,) but by other causes which kept a considerable number of Icelanders, both male and female, to their berths. Wolley, however, behaved remarkably VOYAGE TO ICELAND 29 well and was never fairly under the weather. We had two Scotchmen on board ; they were from Glasgow and were, and are, prospecting to see if they can open any advantageous trade. Both of them good sort of fellows. Wolley would not have it, but I am sure I saw an Alca alle on this day ; the next day we both saw two, all appeared to be in good summer dress ; the first of the species, of course, he or I had ever seen. We now had rather roughish weather with rain. Lots of Fulmars about. In the afternoon we fancied we saw land, which towards evening it clearly proved to be. Just about sun- down, somewhere towards 9 o'clock, a Wheatear came on board, and evidently wished to pass the night with us, but I doubt if the poor beast succeeded in doing so. Next morning we passed the Westmann Islands about 2 o'clock, but it was thick when I got on deck and land was not visible ; soon after we sighted it again and never again lost it. About noon we passed the celebrated Meal Sack, but we must have been nearly two miles from it. It is certainly well named, for in one direction it has very much the sort of look of a sack half filled, with the sides turned down, and I do not doubt but that in the season it is white enough on the top. On the landward side runs out a low shelf or rock, whereon the Greak Auk is supposed to have bred. Outside at the distance of about four times its diameter lies a small low skerry, which had a very inviting appearance, but the water is said at times to go right over it. There were a great quantity of Gannets and Fulmars about, also Kittiwakes and the common Alcidce. We looked of course for the Geier Fugle, but in vain. It came on to blow pretty smartly, and I think our Captains (for we had both an English and a Danish one on board, who will I take it have a real good cat and dog life of it during the summer) were glad when we let go our anchor off this place. We were much amused at an enthusiastic young girl rushing up from below as we passed a solitary grass- covered house, and in spite of the traces of so much 30 VISIT TO ICELAND suffering on her face, exclaiming, " Ah, there is Ness ! there was I born ! " Just before we anchored I had a good view of a Pomarine Skua. Eider-ducks, Ravens and Grt. B. b. Gulls about. When we landed we came straight up to the Hotel or Club as they call it, where we obtained lodgings and where we still are, pretty well accommo- dated, faring much better than I had expected, though we have to eat both Eider Ducks and Merganser. The next morning we called on the Rector of the Native School, from whom we then and since experienced much civility and coffee. Afterwards we did ourselves the honour of visiting the Governor, Count Trampe, nephew of the man of that name who was here in Hooker's time, and was taken prisoner by Jorgensen. With him also we got on very well, and between these two we now know nearly every one of consideration in the place. The next three days it blew a great gale ; so much so that we were unable to get our heavy baggage from the steamer ; but this was nothing to the awful night we had on Friday when we went to eat a " bit of bread " with the Rector. Three or four of the biggest swells were asked to meet us, and a terrible quantity of claret and punch had to be drunk ; however, we got home after two in the morning, but I can honestly say quite sober, and thanks to the purity of the drinks were none the worse the next day. We called on the apothecary, who has the reputa- tion of being an ornithologist, but found nothing of interest in the few skins he had — Iceland Falcon, Anas Barrovii, A. histrionica, etc. We saw a picture of the last Great Auk ; probably the one seen by Pliny Miles and Mrs. Bushby, a wretched performance ; this bird was said to have been taken at the Meal Sack in 1846. We have since seen a man who lives at Kirkjuvogr, the nearest village to the Meal Sack. He has made four trips there, the last in /56, when no Geier Fugles were found ; on the previous occasions, 24, 7, and 2 were obtained. We are to go to him in about a fortnight, and then to make the expedition in two boats. I do not DELAY AT REYKJAVIK 31 think there is much risk, if, as we shall do, we wait for favourable weather. We are now in treaty with a Divinity Student who comes from that part of the country to make a special journey to the Eastern Geier Fugle skerry for us, as it is impossible for us to visit both that and the Cape Reykjanes locality within the necessary time. It will be an expensive business, but it is, I am inclined to think, the best card in the pack, and one I should never forgive myself for not playing, if afterwards it should turn out the birds were there. It is very doubt- ful if this rock, lying as it does 40 miles out, has been visited for a hundred years. This fellow, by name Magnussen, will not be back by the time the steamer sails next. He only came to us this evening, and we have hardly considered the terms, but I think we shall engage with him. He is highly recom- mended by the Rector, but there is some difficulty about his going, as he ought to pass an examination at the College here just about the time ; but the Rector has promised to see if that necessity can be avoided, so sensibly do they regard such matters here. Only fancy at Cambridge the Vice-Chancellor letting a man off his Little-Go because he was wanted to go and look for a Great Bustard's nest ! ! ! But Herr Rector Jonsen is a real good fellow. The Land-Physicus, Herr Hjaldalin, is to go with us to Kirkjuvogr, and we are to take as guide Geier Zoega, the man Bushby recommended. I very much want to go first to the Geysers, as nothing ornithological can yet be done (for I should think nothing but Iceland Falcon has eggs now, and we must give up hope of taking any ourselves as they do not breed within many days' journey of this), and we may afterwards be hurried for time ; but Wolley requires gentle managing, he is too fond of delaying things. May3. We have just heard that the steamer is positively to sail to-night, so I must make haste to finish my letter, especially as a learned professor of the Icelandic tongue is expected every minute, to give us our second lesson in 32 VISIT TO ICELAND his language, and Wolley is studying his task, which is a Saga and seems to be written intentionally for beginners, as it opens, " There was a man and his name was Grim." The pronunciation is the most difficult thing I ever heard, it beats Finnish into fits, and the spelling seems to be no guide to it. I want to know a few words as up the country there will be no one who can speak Danish. We have a disagreeable wet day, but altogether the weather is better than I expected it would be, though we have had a Greenland gale with snow, hard frosts several nights, and ice to bear a stone. A good-sized lake, close to the house and the town, has been twice frozen since we have been here. Round its shores I have seen Red- shanks, Ringed Plover and White Wagtail. Wheatears are seen among the buildings of the town, and close by among the small enclosures of stone walls are Snow Bunt- ings and Golden Plover. Ptarmigan are not found near ; there is supposed to be a man now gone in search of some for us, but I cannot help thinking he is staying at home. Every Icelandic (as distinguished from Danish) house has attached to it a building for drying fish, and hanging at the door of each is generally to be seen a bundle of roughly prepared skins of Gulls, mostly Kittiwakes ; but I found in one lot a young and old Iceland or Glaucous Gull, I could not make out which, as I had no means of ascertaining the size. I have done nothing yet about getting ponies, in fact there is not much use in doing so until one wants to go somewhere, as there would only be the trouble of having to look after them in the town, and fodder is not only dear but hardly to be got. Henderson, one of the Scotchmen I before mentioned, has bought about 18, however, which he takes back with him ; they are all in the most miserable condition, but with hair so long they look like bears. Kirkjuvogr, near Cape Reykjanes, S.W. of Iceland, May 28, 1858. Here we are at one of the nearest places to the Great Auk Islands, and here we have been for a week. BIKDS AT REYKJAVIK 33 We left Reykjavik on the 19th, having stayed there all the time from our arrival, the spring being so backward that it was said to be impossible to get grass for the horses, and thereby travelling was rendered very difficult. Of course, it was a great bore being weatherbound in the metropolis as it was not lively, and a very bad place ornithologically speaking. Besides this we were almost in a chronic state of intoxication from the unnecessary amount of hospitality we had to endure, but as it was all meant as civilly as possible one had nothing to do but abide it, and certainly no people could have put them- selves in the way of doing all we wished (with this one exception) than everybody we met. I told you before of the readiness with which they allowed Mr. Eric Mag- nussen to start off for us to the Eastern Great A. rocks, and in due time the young man left us in very good heart, and I hope he has now arrived at the point on the coast opposite to it. What the result of his journey may be, we may not know for another six weeks. He was also commissioned to look after some Falcon's eggs, but we thought it best as he was not an ornithologist not to embarrass him with other subjects. Reykjavik, as I said before, is a very bad bird place, and very little, if anything, of any consequence breeds in the immediate neighbour- hood, excepting perhaps Glaucous Gull, which is said to be on some of the islands in the Fjord, but these we could not find any trustworthy person to look for, and of course taken by any one else, they would be of no value, for there are quite enough Grt. Black backs about. The only birds I saw of them up to the present time have been young ones, and the same with Iceland Gulls. Several people in the place make a sort of trade in selling skins and we bought some at moderate prices, but nothing of any rarity. One fellow had a small immature Gull killed last winter, which we got from him. I am not sure whether it is L. ridibundus or not, but none of that group have been yet found in the country. We got also nearly a dozen falcons' skins, nearly all Icelanders but one or two Greenlanders. For a real white Greenlander 34 VISIT TO ICELAND they charge as much as £1, so that we did not go deeply into them. Harlequins and Barrow's Ducks are moderate, but there is no great stock of them. I also got a few birds skinned by a good woman who does them very fairly well, and very reasonably. Young Glaucous, Adult Black-backed Gulls, White-fronted Goose, Great Northern Diver, etc., besides some Ptarmigan ; these have not yet got much out of their winter plumage, though, by the way, I have not seen any fresh-killed the last week or ten days. Thus much of our stay at Reyk- javik ; we left it, as I said before, on the 19th with Geier Zoega (the man recommended by Bushby) as our guide, in company with the Land Physicus, — a sort of Govern- ment Doctor, — who was going his rounds to look after lepers. He is the man whom Ld. Dufferin calls the " cheeriest of Doctors," and very rightly so, as he is a real good fellow. We hired horses for this expedition, as grass is so scarce we could hardly expect to feed them here, and in addition to this the time of our stay here was, and is, so uncertain. We had some difficulty in accomplishing about 30 miles English the first day, owing to the badness of the ponies' condition and of the road ; the Doctor, who is a very big man, had three of his own for his own riding and they all had a benefit of it. I rode one animal all the way except the last few miles. Wolley had two. We had besides in company the Doctor's guide (who was also Ld. Dufferin's and to whom we brought a whip from Ld. D.) and a Veterinary surgeon who is sent here to cure the scab, which is killing all the sheep ; so that we had medical accommodation for man and beast. The Vet., by the way, got a very nasty fall, the ground giving under his pony, who came on the top of him. The greater part of the way lay over streams of lava, all the productions of some one or other of the half-dozen or so respectable-looking volcanoes whose cones break the horizon to the eastward of us. These lava streams vary very much in their character ; some are tolerably smooth, or look like dried coal-tar that has run out ; LAVA AND MOSSES 35 but others are peaked and jagged in the most fantastic way you can imagine ; anyhow, each stream seemed as we came to it to be worse to pass than the last. The road sometimes goes over the stuff, at others winding in and out, up and down, in fissures and faults of it, where generally is collected a foot or two of soft dry sand, which does not render it a less " hard road to travel." A good deal of the lava is grown over with mosses, of which there seems to be a great number of species ; one of the commonest I never saw before, it is very soft and long, dark green, but with a thick white down which gives it the appearance of wool, and this covering so much of the ground and rocks, when contrasted with the dark lava on which it grows, makes the whole scene look more like a good photograph with its lights and shadows well brought out than anything else ; certainly a photograph would be the only thing to give an idea of the look of one of these places. Occasionally a little heather or cranberry, and even birch (six inches high, not more) grows amongst this desolation, and there may be heard and seen the Redwing, singing " tut-tut-tut-tut " just as he does in Lapland, but here being nearly the only song bird it does not sound so monotonous. One sees, too, a good many Snow Buntings, and they have a pretty song. In fact, these with Raven, White Wagtail, Wheatear and Titlark are the only passerine birds in Iceland. Ravens are tamer even than the ones at home and far more impudent. Further on on our march we came to a waterless dis- trict, which did not improve the going of the horses (good water is scarce all over the country, even here it is much too salt to drink for pleasure ; perhaps it is why the Icelanders prefer stronger liquors), but we finally arrived at Keblavik, where we passed the night at a very respect- able place, and stopped there the next day, the Doctor having to visit some of his leprous patients, and we not being in any hurry waited for him. At dinner we had Turnstones and Purple Sandpipers, as we found after- wards by asking to see their heads. 36 VISIT TO ICELAND On the 21st we set out and came on here, but by a long round as we wished to see a priest who lives close to Skagen, and some other people who were supposed to know about Great Auk. They were duly examined and their depositions taken. On our way we saw a great many Turnstones, a few Dunlins and Sanderlings (of the latter I shot a 9> tne ovary backward, and in a very moderate state of plumage) and some Red-necked Phala- ropes. We passed some ponds whereon Faber says he found Grey Phalarope breeding, though he did not get their eggs. We got two fellows to dig at a rubbish heap, where an old man said he remembered seeing Great Auks' bones, but we found nothing but fishes' remains. We finally arrived here late in the evening and saw a beautiful sight on the shore ; three Iceland Gulls, young, of course, sitting on the water close to the landing-place, as tame as possible ; as many Red-necked Phalaropes swimming about in a little bay of their own, hardly larger than a hip-bath ; Purple Sandpipers creeping about on the rocks like rats, and a vast number of Turnstones ; some of these, too, were running about among the houses on the short warren-like turf with Golden Plover, just as you see Blackbirds and Thrushes on a lawn in England. Since we have been here we have done but little in the bird way. We have not yet had a sufiiciently calm day to admit of our going to sea, though one morning we were on the point of starting when our leader, who has been the foreman of most of the later expeditions to the rocks, decided, and wisely as it turned out, that it would not do. Our arrangements are completed ; we are to have two 10-oar boats for greater security, and 16 men in each, so that some may rest ; thus with ourselves and Zoega there will be 35 souls embarked on the enterprise. With these precautions, I think the risk is reduced to a minimum. The information which Wolley has acquired amounts to about this. In old times the true Geirfug- lasker was the place visited, and no one thought of going to the Meal Sack (Eldey) until a boat was seen to land there from a " yacht " (i.e. cutter), and then an enter- BKEEDING-PLACE OF GREAT AUK 37 prising fellow went there and took 8 Great Auks out of a considerable number, the greater part of which escaped as the men did not know the dodge of catching them, which after all amounts only to going very quietly. Shortly after this, in the spring of 1830, a submarine eruption took place, and the true Geirfuglasker sank (whether any part of it is still above the surface is doubt- ful). Since then the Meal Sack has only been visited and with varying success ; one year (probably 1831) 24 were taken there and their skins sold to merchants at Keblavik. In 1846, our present landlord and leader went to the Meal Sack and took two birds ; one egg — if not two — was seen but was accidentally broken, and we cannot make out that the bird has since been seen by any one. The rock has been since visited at least twice, one year in August, which was, of course, far too late to find the bird, and last year people went but were unable to land ; the leader of that expedition is extremely anxious to go again this year, though he declares he saw nothing last time. It seems pretty certain that the bird is very irregular in its visits, sometimes keeping away for several years in succession, so that there is still just a hope. When Faber was here some thirty years ago, he cruised for three days off the old Geirfuglasker ; they were unable to land, but he says he could see every bird on the rock and there was not a Gare-fowl among them ; now it is clear that long after his time there were several successful captures made there, and it has happened in the same way at the Meal Sack. It is very singular that we cannot make out that more than half a dozen, if so many, eggs have been taken here within the last thirty years. The merchants, though they have given large sums for the birds, have never cared much for the eggs, and it is a mystery to us where all the eggs have come from that are in collections, unless indeed they have been from the Eastern islet to which Mr. Magnussen has gone, and where they may have been obtained by French fishing vessels, of whom there are a great number on that coast. All accounts agree in saying that on land 38 VISIT TO ICELAND the bird is blind and only gets its sight when it is in the water, but it has capital ears. Of course, there is some mistake here. In the water it swims deep with its head cocked up, and does not keep dipping its bill as Razor- bills and Guillemots do. Some old fellows say that there are always as many eggs found as birds, which can only be accounted for by the supposition that the cocks and hens relieve each other. It is therefore a point of con- siderable importance whether two eggs or one were found in 1846, and we have been unable to get satisfactory evidence respecting it. If as one man says there were two, there must have been other birds out fishing at the time the boat landed, and then there is a strong pre- sumption that the bird was not exterminated in that year. Wolley is much more sanguine about success than I am, and I think more than he has a right to be ; but at the same time I am not more desponding than I have always been about it. June 2. The steamer passed Reykjanes the afternoon before last. I am in hopes that I may get letters to-day ; but people have such odd notions of the necessity of doing anything at once in this country that I have my doubts. I forgot to say that on the 24th largeish flocks of Knots arrived, which were increased on the following day. They were very wild and it was only after several trials that we shot one, which proved to be a male and well advanced in plumage. Yesterday they had diminished in numbers, and to-day I have not seen one. By far the greater part of the Turnstones and Purple Sandpipers too have gone ; so also Dunlin and Golden Plover, and I have not seen a Sanderling now for nearly a week. I suspect Grey Phalarope breeds hereabouts occasionally ; a man says he found a " Randbrustling " nest on an islet here once, and this name though properly applicable to the Knot, is also used for the other Redbreast, and this man spoke of its swimming in the water like " Odin's Hani " (Red- necked Phi.). We have again tried digging for Great Auks' bones, but without success. We are endeavouring GREAT AUK 39 to get some live White-winged Gulls for the Zoological, but the brutes are very wary, and do not seem inclined to take either a baited hook or to get into a snare. On Sunday (the 30th) I saw a fine Buffon's Skua here, and yesterday evening a man sent us one from Keblavik that he had shot. I have tried several times in vain to find Snow Buntings' nests ; they are now building, but they do not seem to have a good heart in the matter, for often after picking up a nice bit of wool or a feather they let it drop again before long. I succeeded some days ago in watching a White Wagtail to its nest, but there are no eggs yet. The only eggs I have seen, are one nest of Lesser Black-backed Gull and three Golden Plovers' which have been brought in. The weather still looks far from being settled, and it seems as if we might be here at least another fortnight. What our future plans may be I cannot say at all. Of course, the great object is to reach Great Auk, but unless we soon get the attempt made it will be of no use going northward, and then we must devote ourselves to Grey Phalarope in this corner of the island. We have sent to the westward to Oddi, for Gooses' eggs, as Faber says Anser albifrons is there only. I shall certainly try and get home by the middle of August, though I think Wolley will very likely stay longer. Elveden, August 16, 1858. The result, then, in short was nothing. Not one day of the whole two months we were at Kirkjuvogr was the sea ever sufficiently calm to have allowed us to land, even had we gone out, and we have come back knowing no more than when we started whether the Great Auk is living or dead. CHAPTER IV THE GREAT AUK- THE journey to Iceland, though it resulted in no definite knowledge as to the continued existence of the Gare-fowl, so far from discouraging Newton proved to be the beginning of a prolonged investigation of the natural history, distribution, and remains of that most remarkable bird. The many days that they spent in enforced idleness in Iceland were occupied by Newton and Wolley in examining a score or more of witnesses, fishermen and sailors, who had visited the breeding-places of the Gare- fowl and had been present on the occasions when the birds had been killed or captured. The result of their investigations was published * by Newton after Wolley 's death. An interesting point, and one to be greatly deplored, which they discovered in the course of their inquiry, was that the extermination of the bird had been greatly hastened by the action of the European museums in offering large sums for their skins and eggs. Discussing the probable fate of the bird, Newton wrote | : — As to the extinction of the Great Auk, if it is extinct, I think it has been mainly accomplished by human means. The first ^decided blow, from which probably the race never rallied, must have been that delivered by the crew of a strange vessel who about 45 years ago, while lying becalmed off Cape Reykjanes, landed on the Geirfuglasker and committed an enormous slaughter. * " Abstract of Mr. J. Wolley's Researches in Iceland respecting the Gare-fowl or Great Auk (Alca impennis, Linn.)," Ibis, October, 1861. t Letter to T. Southwell, Esq., August 30, 1858. Elveden. 40 EXTERMINATION OF GREAT AUK 41 They loaded their boat with birds, among which Gare- fowls were in no inconsiderable number, leaving yet as many more on the island which they had killed but could find no room for. I saw a man who was present on this occasion. Some 18 years later the Geirfuglasker sank beneath the waves in a volcanic disturbance of the sea's bottom, and about that time a few birds, the descendants probably of those who had survived the great massacre, were found on an island lying nearer the mainland, but still only to be reached with difficulty. Under the influence of the " Almighty Dollar " (though in Iceland it is not worth 4/2) these poor birds were persecuted, their eggs plundered and their necks broken to supply the demand which Museums were then creating. And so the number dwindled, until in 1844, the only two then to be seen were taken, their egg broken (the shell left on the rock) and their skins shipped to Europe. I do not think there is any good evidence of the bird being seen since that time ; but I confess I do not give it quite up, nor shall I for the next five or six years, though the places suitable for its breeding station must be very few in number. The coast of Iceland is well known, and as Iceland is the most northern limit of the bird's range, it is useless trying further towards the Pole. The east coast of Greenland is encumbered by ice, and Labrador is nearly as well known as Iceland. Wolley died in the year following their return to England, and Newton never found an opportunity of repeating his visit to Iceland, but from that time he began to collect every scrap of information * relating to the Gare-fowl and to prepare a complete list f of all the existing remains of the bird — eggs, skins, and bones. On his journeys about England and the Continent he visited every public and private collection which possessed a * " The Gare-fowl and its Historians," Natural History Review, October, 1865. t " On Existing Remains of the Gare-fowl (Alca impennis)," The Ibis, April, 1870. 42 THE GREAT AUK Gare-fowl and made careful notes of its history. In John Wolley's collection of eggs, which was bequeathed to him, were two eggs of the Gare-fowl : these formed the nucleus of his own famous collection of seven eggs, which are now in the University Museum at Cambridge. It is hardly necessary to say that the eggs were sold in those days far below the enormous prices they fetch nowadays, but there was a good deal more of romance about it then than there is now in bidding at auction for an egg, every point in whose history for the last fifty years is known. Mr. Gould bought an egg at, a toyshop in Regent Street for ten pounds, and, thinking it to be a coloured model, sold it again a few days later. Mr. Yarrell bought an egg in Paris for two francs ! The story of Newton's first purchase is graphically told in a letter to Canon Tristram : — • I dread the consequences of some news I have to impart, especially as regards Salvin and the Godmans. However, it is a punishment on them for their base deser- tion of me, and a reward to me for my patience under adversity. In going about London this very wet day I have picked up the greatest prize an English Oologist can meet with. I stumbled on the scent of it in the subterranean regions of Bloomsbury, and after a brilliant burst in a hansom ran it to ground under the shadow of St. Mary-le-Strand, a locality already sacred to the gentle memories of poor old Salmon and his great egg. The long and short is I have to-day purchased a Great Auk's egg, one whose existence was previously unknown to me. I felt bound to rescue this Andromeda from being chained in the sunshine of Gardner's window, but I must confess she is not remarkable for her good looks, though I have seen worse, and I am glad to say her antecedents are likely to prove extremely interesting. I expect to hear of Salvin and Percy Godman embrac- ing and then leaping off the top of Sno3haetten, and of Fred's drowning himself in the Lake of Lucerne through BUYING GREAT AUK'S EGG 43 envy. Poor fellows ; but what could one do ? Is a Great Auk's egg to be suffered to be pilloried in Oxford Street exposed to the contemptuous gaze of the cads of Holborn ? Ho ! St. Geirfowl to the rescue ! Of the price no man knoweth save and myself ; all I can say is that sentimental oologising is expensive, and may that consideration comfort my absent brothers of the B.O.U.* The antecedents of that egg were, as Newton sup- posed, extremely interesting and not altogether reputable. When he first saw it, the egg bore a paper label, and the owner, Mr. Calvert, showed Newton a number of other eggs bearing similar labels, which he said he had bought recently at the sale of the Natural History part of the Museum of the United Service Institution. But the Great Auk's egg, though he thought it came from the same collection, he said he had bought from some one else a fortnight before. I told him that I had learned from Mr. Leadbeater that there was no such thing in the collection, but he replied that the sale was so badly managed that whole boxes, full of odds and ends, were sold without examina- tion, and this agreed also with Mr. Leadbeater's account. It ended in my coming to terms with Mr. Calvert ; I was to have the egg conditionally on his informing me whence he obtained it, and he was to keep it for me till my return from the Continent, whither I was intending to proceed that night — I paying a deposit upon it. On September 4 I called by appointment to redeem the egg, and upon my paying the price agreed upon, it was handed over to me by Mr. Calvert, who informed me that he had it from one Westall, of Porchester or Portland Terrace, Bayswater — he could not recollect which. I complained that this was not according to our agreement, for that he had promised to give me the person's address. I lost no time, however, in writing to each of the places * Letter to H. B. Tristram, August 18, 1860. 44 THE GREAT AUK he had named, but received no reply. Subsequently I wrote to Captain Burgess, the Secretary of the United Service Institution, to obtain the address of Captain Vidal, whose name was on the label attached to the egg, to whom I also applied ; but that officer having taken up his abode in Canada, it was not till the following summer that I received any reply. When it did come, it was dated Moon River, Canada West, June 12, 1861, and was to the effect that he had never given a Great Auk's egg to the United Service Museum. Later in the same year, November 7, 1861, the Council of the Linnsean Society accepted the bequest of Mr. Salmon's collection of eggs, which they had declined some time previously on account of certain conditions attached to its acceptance. Soon after it was found that no Great Auk's egg was contained in it, and in its place was a Swan's rudely spotted and blotched with ink. The conclusion then was not difficult to draw. It is obvious, however, that with the view of putting a purchaser on the wrong scent, a label had been removed from some egg out of the United Service Museum and affixed to the present specimen. Whether the substitution was effected with the know- ledge or connivance of the executor, there is no evidence to show, nor can I say whether he may not have had a perfect right to part with this or any other specimen before handing over the collection to the Linnsean Society. He certainly attempted to make a bargain with the Society for it, and I suppose felt justified in doing so. Mr. Calvert became possessed of Mr. Salmon's Egg- Catalogue, which he subsequently sold to Mr. Edward Bidwell, when it was found that the leaf containing the specimen of the Great Auk had been removed ! The mutilated volume was transferred by Mr. Bidwell to the Linnsean Society in 1891.* The doubtful origin of the egg and the questionable * " Ootheca Wolleyana," pp. 373-374. TEN GREAT AUKS' EGGS 45 honesty of one of its late owners was a subject of trouble to Newton, as is seen from an interesting footnote attached to the description of the egg in the " Ootheca Wolleyana," p. 376 :— It would be absurd of me to ignore the fact that persons there are, even among my friends, who have been inclined to think that I was guilty of some sharp practice in possessing myself of this egg. I trust that the plain statement of facts fully given above will remove any misconception on that score. Both before and since the transaction, eggs of the Gare-fowl have turned up in a manner the most unexpected. While I was engaged with Mr. Calvert, Mr. Moore, of the Liverpool Museum, entered the shop and told me that only a short time before he had discovered a beautiful egg of Alca impennis in the Derby Collection which he, though he had been Curator of it for more than ten years, had never before seen. In or about the very same year two were found by Dr. Lepierre in the Museum at Lausanne, where they had lain, since 1846 at least, unsuspected ; and in 1861 I myself found in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons no fewer than ten, which must have been there for fifty years or more without their existence having been recognised. There is therefore nothing at all extraordinary in the supposition that one might have been overlooked in the Museum of the United Service Institution, and it was only the facts that the alleged donor's name was affixed to it, and that he many months after denied having ever made such a gift, which proved the story to be untrue, while subsequently the disappear- ance of Mr. Salmon's specimen from his cabinet indicated the source whence the present specimen was derived. Rather more than a year later Newton made the greatest discovery of Great Auks' eggs that ever fell to the lot of a naturalist. Only fancy a discovery I made the other day ; it quite took away my breath ! Going to Surgeons' Hall 46 THE GREAT AUK to inspect Owen's dissection of a Great Bustard, I found Huxley there, who asked me what I wanted. He told me I should most likely find it in such and such a place. Ascending to the topmost gallery of the innermost room, a glass case with birds' eggs met my eye. After looking at one or two grimy Ostrich's and deformed Turkey's which might have belonged to John Hunter, I saw, as I thought, a nice model of a Great Auk, next to it was a prickly hen's, and then, on, on, on, as far as the eye could reach, Great Auk's ! ! To cut it short, there were ten, nearly all in excellent preservation, though one or two are a little broken. Of course, I hardly obtained credence from my friends ; but next day I took Tristram and Sclater and Simpson, and we all four had the case opened and handled the eggs which are neatly sealing- waxed on to boards. As soon as my first emotions by the way were over I called out over the railing to Huxley and told him what I had discovered ; whereupon to the astonishment of some grave-looking medical students in spectacles, he answered back that I was like Saul who went out to seek his father's asses and found a Kingdom ; to which I could only respond that I hoped I should, like my illustrious prototype, succeed in gaining possession of my discovery. How they came there I don't know, but expect to make out ; no doubt they are Iceland. I always was sure of more being in England than I could trace.* Not one of those ten eggs did find its way into Newton's hands, but his collection, now belonging to the University of Cambridge, ultimately contained seven eggs of the Great Auk, the largest number in any collec- tion. Two had belonged to John Wolley, one was the specimen obtained from Mr. Calvert, and four were presented to Newton by Lord Lilford in 1888. These latter four eggs had been sold in Edinburgh only eight years previously for the ridiculously small price of * Letter to Edward Newton, Christmas Day, 1861. HISTORY OF GKEAT AUKS' EGGS 47 thirty-two shillings. The history and antecedents of all the specimens were minutely investigated, and a mass of correspondence, which he preserved, with people in many countries testifies to Newton's untiring industry in this respect. Many of his correspondents were inaccu- rate, and some even drew on their imagination to give him information which they thought might appear to be true, but he was expert in sifting the grain from the chaff, and never recorded any fact of the accuracy of which he had the smallest doubt. It is very curious how men readily accept as evidence of history, what is not evidence at all. Not many days since I had a remarkable instance of this. I wanted to find out what had become of the Gare-fowl's egg that Wilmot had in his collection, and at his death left to a friend of his, Mr. George L. Russell, himself now dead. I made inquiries through a friend, and in time got a letter telling me all I wanted to know and a great deal that I did not know ; e.g. that the egg was taken by Wolley on an island near Archangel (! !). Fortunately for the cause of historical accuracy I have Wilmot's own testimony that he bought his specimen for £5 in 1846, of Leadbeater, and there can be little doubt of its being one of those that were got on Eldey.* The history of Mr. YarrelPs egg, which went to Mr. F. Bond and subsequently into the collection of Baron D'Hamonville, was investigated by Mr. Harting. Yarrell had bought the egg as a Duck's egg from a fisherwoman at Boulogne or Paris, and her story was that she had received it from her husband, who had been a seaman on board a whaler, implying that it might have been brought from the Arctic regions This Newton considered most improbable. * Letter to Col. H. W. Feilden, December 1, 1884. 48 THE GREAT AUK Magdalene College, Cambridge, March 17, 1894. MY DEAR HARTING, My letter to D'Hamonville, which he quoted in the Bulletin, was written to correct the statement he had made in the Memoires of the French Zool. Soc., 1888 (p. 225), and the point of it was to show that Yarrell had bought his egg of Alca impennis in France, but whether at Boulogne or in Paris did not, for the purpose I had in view, signify — so I merely expressed my belief without turning up the evidence. It was only the other day when the " whaler " made a public appear- ance that the place where it was bought became a con- sideration of any importance. Then I looked into the matter with the result that you know. I have not much doubt that old Bond, to the end of his days, honestly believed that the Great Auk inhabited the " Arctic Regions " ; but then he never cared to inform himself very accurately on points of this kind, and would not recognise the improbability (I might say the impossibility) of a " whaler " bringing home one of its eggs — or even a dozen of them. If I were to correct or refute all the incorrect stories about this bird, which are published from time to time, I should have enough to do. Even when they concern myself I am generally content to leave them alone, just as I left alone an astounding statement in the Field of December 17, 1887, about my discovery of the ten eggs in the College of Surgeons Museum, or one in the Standard of February 23, 1894, about the destruction of Scales's egg, which (except the fact that it was burnt) is an entire fabrication ! It is only on a point like this which one has been driving into people for more than 30 years that I feel called upon to interfere ; but I see that the attempt is useless ; though it does vex me, I confess, when those who ought to know, and really do know, better incon- siderately help to maintain the popular delusion. This delusion was for a long while (and possibly is now) shared by Mr. Champley of Scarborough, as I know that at one GARE-FOWL BOOK 49 time he was busy in inquiring of Arctic navigators and others who had been in the far north after Alca impennis, although the absurdity of such inquiry had been demon- strated for several years. I wish there were the slightest chance of my being able to finish a Great Auk book before I die — but it is impossible. Nevertheless, I go on collecting all the materials I can, and somebody who comes after me may make use of them. I think that two-thirds of such a book would be taken up by refuting errors ! Yours very truly, ALFRED NEWTON. It was his purpose to write a book, to be called " The Story of the Gare-fowl," and after the publication of the " Ootheca Wolleyana " he hoped that he might have time to put it into order, but his life was not long enough for that. He had collected during the course of fifty years notes on every known specimen of the bird and of its eggs, and it may be hoped that some day this labour will be completed. Every question connected with the bird was of absorbing interest to him, not the least being that of the origin of its Sightlessness. He was never fully satisfied that the wings of the Great Auk were the degenerate remains of wings, which in remote ancestors had been useful for flight. I can't satisfy myself as to the way in which the Gare- fowl's Sightlessness was produced, and I suppose I never shall. I can only conjecture that he found wings fit for flight articles too expensive for him to indulge in. If he descended from a Razor-bill it is not difficult to imagine that he found big wings were not worth the trouble of growing and it was better to expend energy in simply accumulating bulk. But one has no more right to assume that he descended from a Razor-bill than that the Razor-bill descended from him. The most reasonable 50 THE GREAT AUK conjecture seems to be that they had a common ancestor who differed in some degree from both, but still one would think that common ancestor must have had the power of flight. Such natural enemies as that common ancestor (or the Razor-bill for the matter of that) possessed may be roughly divided into 2 categories : enemies in the air or on land, and enemies in the water. Now in the water, wings to an Alcine bird are chiefly useful for steering (the propelling power being in the legs) and a very little bit of wing would do to steer with, and escape from a grampus or seal (?). In the air a wing must be very good to be good for anything, if not it is better not to fly at all (witness Wollaston's Madeiran Coleoptera). Natural selection would soon weed out animals with moderate wings and leave those that had the best or the worst. On land I take it the Gare-fowl had practically no enemies till man came to civilise him. I don't say these views satisfy me, there may be considerations I have altogether overlooked, but I think they may serve as indications of something like the way it was done.* During the last years of his life he spent a few weeks of almost every summer on board the yacht of his friend, Henry Evans, of Derby. Most of their cruises were in Scottish waters, and it was the keenest delight to him to visit the former breeding-places of the Great Auk. May 13, 1898. I am off on June 17th for another cruise in Henry Evans' yacht. I want to stop at the Holm of Papa Westray and see the slope on which the King and Queen of the Auks used to hold their court.f And a few weeks later — We had a most glorious day on the Holm of Papa * Letter to Col. H. W. Feilden, July 27, 1885. t The last Orcadian Great Auk was killed in 1812, and is now in the British Museum. VISIT TO ORKNEY 51 Westray, and I wished the whole time you had been there. The sloping slabs would admit of a whole regiment of Great Auks landing and marching up in extended line to a place where eggs could be laid in safety, and this at any stage of the tide or almost any conceivable weather — for the place is beautifully sheltered by the covering coast of Papa Westray.* When, later, his increasing infirmity prevented him from venturing into the confined space of a small yacht, he often suggested to others that they should explore coasts and islands with a view to finding what might appear to have been possible haunts of the extinct bird. In the spring of 1907 Major Barrett-Hamilton f wished to visit the islands, as being a possible origin of the Great Auk remains found in Ireland, and as a matter of course he applied to Professor Newton for advice. I am very glad you have seen and arranged with Ussher for a trip to those islets, also that for you it will not be so difficult a business. Now as to " minute instructions " for which you ask, beyond desiring you to run into no danger — and that is a positive order, not to be neglected on any account — I don't know what there is to be said. The question to ascertain is whether these rocks may have been (as Ussher suggests) a sufficient resort for the Gare-fowl, at any time of the year, but breeding season (the middle of May) especially, to make it worth while of the old kitchen midden people to have visited them and got thence the plunder of which Ussher has found the remains. Otherwise it is difficult to understand where their birds could have been got. From what we know elsewhere, Gare-fowls are stupid and easily taken on land, but hard to approach at sea, and granting that the men had bows and arrows, they would not get them very easily. * Letter to J. A. Harvie-Brown, July 1, 1898. t G. E. H. Barrett-Hamilton, M.A., of Trin. Coll., Camb., author of " British Mammals." Died, South Georgia, 1914, 52 THE GREAT AUK Then there is also this consideration ; do these rocks afford a place for a flightless bird to run up a slope, or even scramble over a not too high ascent to a place where she might lay her egg out of the reach of the waves ? On Eldey the available space must have been small, and not over big on the sunken Gare-fowl skerry, though I have no means of computing what the area was in either case. On Holm of Papa Westray, supposing that I was right in determining the place, there was room for scores, not to say hundreds, and on Funk Island for millions. If your Irish locality could accommodate a score it would have been quite a creditable place, but I should think that unless it lodged as many the people would hardly have found it worth visiting for plunder. About all these matters you must use your own intelligence. You know how Razorbills and their like behave, and you must make allowance for a bigger sort bereft of flight.* The extinct and disappearing faunas, especially of oceanic islands, had a peculiar attraction for him, and among other birds in which he took the greatest interest was the Dodo. By the fortunate circumstance of his brother Edward, himself an accomplished ornithologist, having been appointed Assistant Colonial Secretary of Mauritius in 1859, he had exceptional opportunities of acquiring specimens of the Dodo of Mauritius and the Solitaire of Rodriguez. In 1865 the British Association appointed him with Mr. Tristram and Dr. P. L. Sclater to be a " Committee for the purpose of assisting Mr. E. Newton in his researches for the extinct Didine birds of the Mascareen Islands, and to report thereon at the next meeting of the Association ; and that the sum of £50 be placed at their disposal for the purpose." The results of these inquiries were published in several papers in the Reports of the British Association and Proceedings of the Zoological and Royal Societies. His * Letter TO G. E. H. Barrett-Hamilton, May 18, 1907. THE DODO 53 article on the Dodo in the " Dictionary of Birds " may be cited as an illustration of the learning and the exhaus- tive criticism with which he could discuss a matter that strongly appealed to him. During the next fifteen years Newton secured specimens of the remains of most of the extinct birds of the islands, including an almost complete skeleton of the Dodo, which is one of the most valued possessions of the Cambridge University Museum. Many years later, when his friend Mr. Meade- Waldo was joining Lord Crawford on a cruise in the yacht Valhalla, Newton urged him to remember the Dodo and the other extinct birds of the Indian Ocean islands. . . . There is not a single living thing in any one of the islands you are to visit that is not of the highest importance — of that you may be sure — and unfortunately few if any of the people who have been there before have understood what opportunities they had, and therefore have failed to appreciate them. From what you write I should think it very likely that on your way back you will call at Mauritius. In that case you might be doing a great service if you could prevail on the authorities of the Museum there to entrust to you the collection of Dodo's and other mostly extinct birds' bones which they lately bought of a M. Thirion, an enthusiastic barber, living in Port Louis, who has been for some years past digging them up for his own satisfaction — he having had the luck to find a place (I have never known clearly whether a cave or not) which has been very prolific. He made a great secret of the place and I don't blame him for that, but he sold all his " find " to the Museum, and there it is with no one, so far as I know, competent to describe it. Among the specimens are portions of the Dodo's skeleton, which were hitherto unknown, and it is most desirable that they should be described and figured properly — to say nothing of the remains of other extinct species, Lophopsittacus, Aphanapteryx, etc., of 54 THE GREAT AUK which we have but fragments. ... It would be a great thing if you could persuade the people there to let you bring them home to have them done — and certainly there is no other place where they could be done properly except Cambridge, because we have here by far the most complete skeleton of the Dodo, and almost without exception all the remains of the other birds, which were described by my late brother Edward and Gadow in the Transactions of the Zoological Society, and it would be a pity if these were described anywhere else.* When his brother Edward was transferred to the post of Lieutenant-Governor of Jamaica, Newton was enabled to make a valuable collection of the birds of that and other West Indian islands. It was mainly due to Newton also that the " Sandwich Islands Committee " of the British Association was formed and the fast vanishing fauna of that region studied. As an East Anglian Newton was naturally greatly interested in another extinct (so far as Britain is con- cerned) bird, the Great Bustard, or as he liked to call it, the Norfolk Bustard, which had vanished from this country during his own lifetime. Though there were still a few birds lingering in Norfolk in the " thirties," particularly in the neighbourhood of his father's estate of Elveden, it is doubtful if Newton ever saw a native Bustard alive. He made an attempt to see a bird between Cambridge and Ely in 1856, but was too late. Last week I was at Cambridge, and there heard a report that a Bustard had been seen in the neighbour- hood. I accordingly went to Burwell Fen, in company with my brother and a gentleman interested in Orni- thology, and on searching a field of coleseed we found several feathers which were most undoubtedly those of the Great Bustard. The gentleman who accompanied us had been there a few days before and had not only * Letter to E. G. B. Meade- Waldo, October 29, 1905. NORFOLK BUSTARD 55 then found more feathers but had seen a good many foot-prints which could only have been those of that bird. I saw several men at work in the fen, and gathered from them that they had several times seen a " Wild Turkey " (as they called it) : according to one man's account, it had been there from shortly after Christmas until the last few days, but another man who said he thought he had seen it before any one else, was of opinion that the time it had haunted the fen was not more than three weeks. However, in the main points they all agreed, and leave one to entertain no doubt but that for some weeks a Great Bustard had frequented that locality. They were very accurate in their description of the bird ; one man compared the markings on the back and wings to a viper, saying that " it was dappled like a snake " ; another said it "made a wonderful roarin' with its wings" when it flew over. I was there on Thursday, the 6th inst., and on the preceding Saturday it had been shot at by a gunner, but only with a common hand-gun, and as the bird was more than 100 yards off, it doubtless escaped unhurt. I was unable to make out satisfactorily whether it had been seen since that day, but I am inclined to think that it took the gunner's hint and departed. Since then I have heard nothing new, though my brother who has been at Cambridge until within the last day or two, has made unceasing inquiries. I therefore sincerely hope that it has altogether escaped and that it will not in consequence help to fill the blood-stained pages of the Natural History Magazines.* Twenty years later, in the company of Mr. J. E. Harting and others, he had the good fortune to see a Bustard alive in England. Mr. Harting writes : — A brief mention should be made of the pleasure we both experienced in seeing a real wild Bustard in a Norfolk fen. In Feb. 1876, Mr. H. M. Upcher, of * Letter to T. Southwell, March 14, 1856. 56 THE GREAT AUK Sheringham, unexpectedly found one (a male bird) on his property in Blackdyke Fen, Hockwold, and by means of letters to neighbouring landowners, and the dis- semination of printed notices, made strenuous efforts to prevent its being shot. Steps to provide it with a mate were taken by the late Lord Lilford. In company with Mr. Upcher and a few privileged friends we had the satisfaction of watching the movements of the illustrious visitor and seeing the hen bird turned out in the same field of coleseed with it ; but the weather being very inclement at the time, the hen bird was accidentally drowned in a fen dyke, and the male after a stay of seven weeks disappeared. During more than fifty years, up to the time of his death, Newton collected details of the history of the Great Bustard, more especially with reference to its extinction. He amassed an immense amount of in- formation which was to take form, some day, in a book to be called " The Bustard in Britain," but he was never satisfied with the completeness of his material, and the book still awaits an editor. Attempts have been made, from time to time, to reintroduce the Great Bustard into Great Britain, but none of them have been successful. Amongst those who made the experiment was Prince Dhuleep Singh, the owner of Elveden Hall. Bloxworth, August 31, 1874. MY DEAR LILFORD, I have little doubt that if you were the owner of Elden you would be successful in introducing the Bustard, while I don't believe that Dhuleep Singh ever will be. As regards the migration of Bustards formerly in England I have always been in doubt. Neither in Norfolk nor Suffolk did they ever seem to have appeared in their usual abundance in the shooting season. I think I stated this in the notes with which I furnished THE BUSTARD 57 Stevenson, but I have not got his 2nd volume with me here. Indeed, to the best of my recollection, I could never hear of but one well-established instance of a Bustard being seen between harvest time and the begin- ning of the New Year. This was a young bird shot by the late Sir Alexander Grant (an old friend of my father's) at Elden in September. What became of the birds in the meantime I have no idea, but early in January, quite regardless of snow or frost, they used to be seen on the brecks and so remained till the corn (rye) hid them in the summer. The question of polygamy is also a dark point in their history. As to the southern distribution of the species, I never saw an African specimen, and I have sometimes been inclined to doubt whether the big Bustard of Algeria, etc., might not be Otis arabs, which you know poor Drake got in Morocco (Ibis; 1867, p. 424). Yours in haste, ALFRED NEWTON. When Mr. Harting was preparing his edition of " White's Selborne " (published in 1875), he included in it Gilbert White's allusions to the Bustard, hitherto un- published, and sent the proofs to Newton for his comments. Bloxworth, Blandford, August 22, 1874. MY DEAR HAKTING, You will see by the " proof " which I now return of the notes for your edition of " White's Selborne" that I have read it pretty attentively, and have not hesitated to suggest several changes in it of more or less importance. Those of the greatest consequence are such as relate to Black Game and Bustard. It has always puzzled me to account for White's having said that the former had become extinct since his boyhood. The species has existed I imagine always 58 THE GREAT AUK in the wild heathery tract which extends, with even now but few interruptions, from beyond the parish in which I write to Surrey — the tract which you will see laid down on any geological map as the " Bagshot Sand." Sup- posing that the species did for a time become extinct in any one portion of this district it would speedily find its way to its old haunts, so well suited to it, from the remainder. You may certainly have some authority for saying that it was " introduced " to Wolmer Forest — but with- out direct evidence to that effect I should rather attribute its reappearance (supposing White to be right in saying that it had disappeared) to natural causes. But even when White wrote Letter VI. — which I think we may put at or near 1789, the date of publication — (for I imagine that the first few letters were an after-thought, and expressly written by way of introduction to the published work, while the later ones were no doubt real letters) — a Grey Hen had been seen two years before only — and then there is the celebrated " Hybrid Pheasant " sent to him by Lord Stawell from Alice Holt, subsequently to 1789, whose existence required that of a Black Grouse of one sex or the other. Thus I am inclined to doubt White's statement as to its extinction in 1789. As regards Bustards — the birds which from time to time appear in England are unquestionably of foreign extraction. Nothing in the world can be clearer than the extinction of the British race. Norfolk was their last stronghold, but in the south of England they were gone long before. These remarks are simply to explain the alterations I have suggested on your " proof." I believe there is no good authority for the use of the word " nest " as a verb, and hence I have altered it. In any natural history work I should always recom- mend the printing of the English names of species with a capital letter. They are in such cases to all intents and purposes proper names, and should be so distinguished, but I have not marked them on the " proof " for altera- ACCLIMATISATION AND EXTERMINATION 59 tion. Printers to save themselves trouble decry the use of capitals, but within limits it is very desirable. Yrs. very truly, ALFRED NEWTON. Although the re-introduction of the Capercaillie into Scotland had been so successful, Newton never quite approved of these experiments, which he regarded rather as attempts at acclimatisation, and of that he wrote : — Everything relating to what is called Acclimatisation is hateful to me, but I do think it is just possible that if Strix umlensis were introduced into this country, it might be of some use to check the Rat plague, and as Rats themselves are interlopers it might be fair to use aliens against them. In the light of the Little Owl plague at the present time, it is fortunate that that experiment also failed. All questions of the extinction of animals concerned him very closely (vide the article " Extermination " in the " Dictionary of Birds"), and in an address delivered to the British Association at Glasgow in 1876, he described in his own peculiar way the consequences of unconsidered acclimatisation. What if a future " Challenger " shall report of some island, now known to possess a rich and varied animal population, that its present fauna has disappeared ? That its only Mammals were feral Pigs, Goats, Rats and Rabbits — with an infusion of Ferrets, introduced by a zealous " acclimatiser " to check the super-abundance of the rodents last named, but contenting themselves with the colonists' chickens ? That Sparrows and Starlings, brought from Europe, were its only Land- birds, that the former had propagated to such an extent that the cultivation of cereals had ceased to pay — the prohibition of bird-keeping boys by the local school board contributing to the same effect — and that the latter 60 THE GREAT AUK (the Starlings) having put an end to the indigenous insectivorous birds by consuming their food, had turned their attentions to the settlers' orchards, so that a crop of fruit was only to be looked for about once in five years — when the great periodical cyclones had reduced the number of the depredators ? that the Goats had destroyed one half of the original flora and the Rabbits the rest ? that the Pigs devastated the potato gardens and yam-grounds ? This is no fanciful picture. I pretend not to the gift of prophecy ; that is a faculty alien to the scientific mind ; but if we may reason from the known to the unknown, from what has been and from what is to what will be, I cannot entertain a doubt that these things are coming to pass ; for I am sure there are places where what is very like them has already happened. None of those who were present are likely to forget the occasion, one evening in Newton's rooms, when a young man interrupted an interesting talk about the fate of (it may have been) Moas with the rather large question : " Why do birds become extinct ? " The Professor replied without hesitation, " Because people don't observe the Game Laws ; see Deuteronomy xxii. 6." The conversation languished after that and we soon returned to our various colleges, where we looked up his reference and read — If a bird's nest chance to be before thee in the way in any tree, or on the ground, whether they be young ones, or eggs, and the dam sitting upon the young, or upon the eggs, thou shalt not take the dam with the young. But thou shalt in any wise let the dam go, and take the young to thee ; that it may be well with thee, and that thou mayest prolong thy days. CHAPTER V THE ISIS FOR some years it had been the custom for a number of naturalists, most of them members of the University of Cambridge, and all of them interested in the study of Ornithology, to meet together once a year or oftener, for the discussion of various topics and the exhibition of objects of interest. These " conferences," as they were called, were highly appreciated by those who attended them, and in the autumn of 1857 at the meeting which was held (as usual) in Newton's rooms at Cambridge, it was suggested that it would be advisable to establish a magazine devoted solely to Ornithology. In the following year a number of ornithologists met at the British Association meeting at Leeds, when they decided to meet again at Cambridge in November and discuss the question of the magazine. Accordingly a meeting was held in Newton's rooms at Magdalene on November 17, 1858, when the following resolutions were adopted : 1. That an Ornithologists' Union of twenty Members should be formed, with the principal object of establishing a new Journal entirely devoted to Birds. 2. That Lt.-Col. H. M. Drummond should be the President and A. Newton the Secretary of the Union, and that P. L. Sclater should edit the Journal. No official record of the meeting was made, but it seems to be fairly certain that eleven people were present. 61 62 THE IBIS As an instance of my forgetfulness I could have taken oath that Gurney was present at the Conference at Cambridge in October, 1858, when we founded the Ibis — or Avis as was to have been its name. Now I find from looking at old letters that Gurney was not at the Conference of 1858, though he had intended to be there, but had to go to a funeral somewhere else. He had been, however, at a former Conference, that of 1857 I suppose. Those present in 1858 so far as I can make out were yourself, Drummond, P. L. Sclater, and E. C. Taylor whom he brought down, the Godmans, Salvin, Sealy, Simpson, and A. and E. N. — eleven in all. I think any letters of that period are worth keeping, for no doubt the institution of the Ibis had a very remark- able effect on Ornithology all the world over. Alas that the poor old bird should nowadays fly so feebly, and yet I quite believe that its youth might be renewed, if proper steps were taken.* Newton was very definite in declaring that not all of these were the founders of the Union. Don't forget that E. N. [Edward Newton] was emphatically one of the founders of the B.O.U., which is a good deal more than being only one of the original 20. I have always looked on the founders as : — Drummond. Tristram. Newtons (2). Salvin. Godmans (2). The rest — Sclater, Gurney, and Wolley included — were asked to join us. The Editor and the Secretary lost no time in making arrangements for the new magazine, and Messrs. Taylor and Francis agreed to print it. The head of the latter firm, Dr. William Francis, suggested the name Ibis, * Letter to H. B. Tristram, January 2, 1888. H'.