1
PRIVATE LIBRARY
OF
HARLES A. KOFOID.
THE LIBRARY
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
PRESENTED BY
PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND
MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF
SELBORNE.
THE NATURAL HISTORY
AND
ANTIQU ITIES
OF
SELBORNE,
IN THE COUNTY OF SOUTHAMPTON.
BY THE REV. GILBERT WHITE, M.A.
THE STANDARD EDITION BY E. T. BENNETT.
Thoroughly revised, with additional Notes.
BY JAMES EDMUND HARTING, F.L.S., F.Z.S.
FIFTH EDITION.
WITH TEN LETTEES NOT INCLUDED IN ANY OTHER EDITION
OF THE WORK.
ILLUSTRATED WITH ENGRAVINGS BY THOMAS BEWICK
AND OTHERS.
LONDON:
SWAN SONNENSCHEIN, LOWEEY & CO.,
PATERNOSTER SQUARE.
1887.
oc yt
Printed by Hazefl, Watson, & Vtney, Ld., London and Ayleshury
PUBLISHERS' PEEFACE TO THE
FOUETH EDITION.
INGE the publication of our first edition of
this work, in the autumn of 1875, there has
appeared in the "Transactions of the Norfolk
and Norwich Naturalists' Society " a series
often recently discovered letters from Gilbert
White to Robert Marsham, with the corresponding replies.
The extreme interest which attaches to these new letters,
and the fact of their having been edited for the Society by
Mr. Harting has enabled us to reprint them in an appendix
to our present edition, and thus lay before the reader in
one volume all that has hitherto come to light from the pen
of the historian of Selborne.
Those who desire to possess Marsham's replies to these
letters, must be referred to the volume of the Society's
" Transactions " for 1875-76, in which the entire corre-
spondence is published.
CONTENTS.
PAGE
ETTERS TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE 1
LETTERS TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES
BARRINGTON . .136
OBSERVATIONS ON VARIOUS PARTS OF NATURE.
QUADRUPEDS 317
BIRDS 319
INSECTS AND VERMES 341
VEGETABLES 355
METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS . 363
SUMMARY OF THE WEATHER 367
A NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
DR. AIKIN'S ADVERTISEMENT 379
PREFACE TO THE NATURALIST'S CALENDAR . . . 383
A COMPARATIVE VIEW OF WHITE'S AND MARKWICK'S
CALENDARS ........ 385
THE ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE.
LETTERS . 405
VI
CONTENTS.
POEMS.
THE INVITATION TO SELBOENE
SELBORNE HANGER. A Winter Piece. .To the Miss
Battles
ON THE RAINBOW
A. HARVEST SCENE
ON THE DARK, STILL, DRY, WARM WEATHER, occasion-
ally happening in the Winter months .
APPENDIX. Ten Letters from the Rev. Gilbert White to
Robert Marsham, F.R.S., 1790-1793 .
INDEX *
PAGE
517
520
521
522
523
525
561
THE HERMITAGE.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
Page
\ HE Hermitage . vi
Back view of
the residence,
at Selborne,
of the Kev. Gilbert
White xiii
Selborne, from Dorton . . 1
Kaven 7
Ostrea carinata .... 9
Hollow Lane and Bridge,
near Norton .... 13
Approach to the village . 17
Partridge 19
Black grouse 20
Dog and hind .... 24
Fallow deer 31
Hoopoe 38
Crossbill 39
Harvest mouse .... 42
Chaffinch 46
Wheatear 48
Weasel 53
Quill-feathers of the wood
wren 56
Quill-feathers of the wiUow
wren 57
Quill-feathers of the chiff-
chaff. ...... 57
Jackdaw 73
Swallow 79
Melolontha fullo .... 81
Eagle owl 89
Hedgehog 91
Otter 97
Stone curlew 105
Peacock 110
Fern-owl . 114
Page
Redbreast ...... 123
Nest of the whitethroat . . 125
Sparrow-hawk 131
Nest of the willow wren . 135
Bustard 143
Cuckoo 147
Skylark 165
Sand martins' colony at Oak-
hanger 198
Sand martin's nest . . .. 199
Missel-thrush 210
Hog 231
Hawkley Slip 263
Field cricket 265
House cricket 269
Mole cricket and nest . . 271
Black-winged stilt . . . 275
The shell of Gilbert White's
tortoise 277
Peregrine falcon .... 292
Cat 318
Magpie 322
Mallard 323
Hen partridge 325
Ranatra linearis .... 346
Sphinx stellatarum . . . 348
The grindstone oak, in the
Holt Forest .... 357
South view of Selborne
church 411
The vicarage house . . . 419
Temple, in the parish of
Selborne 438
The Plestor 440
Way leading to Gracious
Street 512
PKEFACE.
;F any apology be deemed necessary for the
appearance of a new edition of one of the
most delightful books in the English lan-
guage, the reader need only be reminded of
the physical changes which have taken place
since Gilbert White's day in the district of which he wrote,
and of the vast additions which are daily being made to
our knowledge in almost every branch of natural history.
Wolmer Forest, which eighty years ago was et without one
standing tree in the whole extent" (p. 18), is now partly
enclosed, and planted to the extent of several hundred acres
with oak, larch, and Scotch fir. Bin's Pond, a " consider-
able lake/' which at one time " afforded a safe and pleasing
shelter to wild ducks, teals, and snipe'' (p. 26), has long
since been drained, and cattle now graze on its bed. The
covert in which foxes and pheasants formerly abounded
(p. 27) has almost entirely disappeared.
The village church at various times having undergone
repairs, has sustained in consequence considerable altera-
tion. Ancient tombs have disappeared (p. 413), and the
interior of the edifice has been entirely remodelled.
The curious bridge at Oakhanger, " of considerable anti-
quity and peculiar shape " (p. 504) , has given place to a more
modern structure of greater convenience though of less
interest, while of the ancient manor-house, called Temple,
"with its massive thick walls and narrow windows" (p.
439), not a vestige now remains.
No less remarkable are the changes which ha ye taken
x PREFACE.
place in the fauna and flora of the district. The Red-deer,
which once roamed the Forest of Wolmer, and which were
driven "along the vale" in a herd of 500 for the amuse-
ment of Queen Anne (pp. 21-22), have long since become
extinct. Black game, which " abounded much before shoot-
ing flying became so common" (p. 20), though thought
by Gilbert White to have been exterminated, have yet
maintained their footing, and are now to be found in not
inconsiderable numbers.
Those noble birds the Bustards, which once frequented
the downs (pp. 143, 156), and which when seen in flocks
at a distance were thought to resemble Fallow-deer (p. 156,
note 2), have entirely vanished as denizens of England.
The Honey-buzzard has deserted Selborne Hanger (p. 130),
and the Eaven is extinct on Blackmoor (p. 6) . The
Chough, which formerly bred on Beachy Head and on all
the cliffs of the Sussex coast (p. 117), has long since dis-
appeared.
On the other hand, birds which were unknown to Gil-
bert White, or were possibly overlooked by him, have
since been met with in the neighbourhood of Selborne ;
while others, which he regarded as rare, or at least as acci-
dental visitants to his parish, have since been found to be
not uncommon there. In the former class may be instanced
the Girl bunting (p. 47, note 3) and the Garden warbler
(p. 59, note) ; in the latter, the Landrail (p. 328) and the
Teal (p. 177) . Woodcocks, which in his day were not sup-
posed to breed in England (pp. 159, 161), now do so regu-
larly in Hants and Sussex, to say nothing of other localities.
In regard to the botany of the district, allusion has
already been made to the changes which have taken place
since White's day in the aspect of the forest-land. To this
may be added that while some few plants of interest have
been included in the c ' Flora Selborniensis " since Gilbert
White described it, others, as the Toothwort, Lathrcea
squamaria, and the Marsh Cinquefoil, Comarum palustre,
have never since been met with in the neighbourhood.
Under these circumstances, and having regard to the time
which has elapsed since any edition of White's " Selborne "
P HE FACE. xi
nas appeared, it need be no matter of surprise that steps
should once more be taken to add, if possible, to the popu-
larity of a favourite author, and render his work still more
instructive by bringing the information which he has im-
parted so agreeably to a par with the knowledge of the
present day.
Of the many editions of this work which have been pub-
lished since 1789, when the original quarto appeared, it
will only be necessary to refer to one.
Messrs. Sonnenschein & Co. having acquired the copy-
right of what has long been admitted to be the standard
edition of the work, namely, that which was prepared by the
late Mr. Edward Turner Bennett, a well-known naturalist and
former secretary to the Zoological Society, an opportunity
presented itself for thoroughly revising his notes, which,
written in 1837, had grown somewhat out of date ; while
the unexpected acquisition of a number of Bewick's en-
gravings suggested the happy idea of illustrating the wort
of a favourite author with the designs of an equally renowned
engraver. With this object in view, they invited my co-
operation as editor, and I need hardly say that I acceded
to their request with a considerable degree of pleasure.
The book is one in which I have long delighted ; the
neighbourhood of Selborne I know well ; and Gilbert
White's favourite theme, ornithology, I have made my
special study for years. The task, therefore, has been
undertaken con amore ; how far I have succeeded I must
leave to critics to determine. Suffice it to say that my
aim has been two-fold; to present the reader with the
original text as issued by White himself (to which end the
proof sheets have been carefully collated with the first
quarto), and to supply such editorial notes only as are
necessary to bring the subject matter on a level with our
information at the present day.
In this respect I have ventured to differ materially from
my worthy predecessor, Mr. Bennett, whose notes, though
generally of interest and value, are occasionally somewhat
irrelevant and ofttimes unpardonably long.
Commencing with four pages of notes on the geological
xii PREFACE.
features of Selborne, notwithstanding a chapter on the
subject by the author, we find the same number of pages
devoted to a note on bats, and as many more to the subject
of migration. The author had only to allude to the infra-
orbital cavities in the heads of deer to suggest to his editor
a dissertation upon deer and antelopes, illustrated by an
engraving of two heads of an Indian species to which, it is
needless to say, no reference is made by the historian of
Selborne. An equally long note, concluding with a de-
scription and figure (p. 178) of a bird which Gilbert White
never saw and does not even mention, is quite as irrelevant
and out of place.
But if four pages of notes be considered an unduly long
commentary upon a single passage, what is to be thought
of fifteen pages (pp. 119-213), the majority of them ap-
pended to only two lines of text, upon the treatment of
birds in confinement, and suggested, apparently, by a
casual remark of the author that a blackcap and sedge
bird " would require more nice and curious management in
a cage than he should be able to give them " ? These cannot
but be regarded as errors of judgment. However entertain-
ing a note may be, it should never be introduced at the
expense of the author. Long notes, moreover, weary the
reader, distract his attention, and ofttimes cause him to
lose sight of his author altogether. While I have retained,
therefore, in the present edition, many valuable notes by
Mr. Bennett and his coadjutors, the late Hon. and Rev.
W. Herbert and Professor Kennie, it has seemed desirable,
for the reasons stated, to eliminate much that they have
supplied, and either to refrain altogether from dwelling on
passages which in point of fact require no comment, or to
substitute, where such is needed, a more modern interpre-
tation than was offered to the reader five and thirty years
ago.
The original foot-notes by Gilbert White have been
scrupulously reproduced, and are in every case distin-
guished by the initials, " G. W."
As the reader may expect, not unnaturally, to have pre-
sented to him some brief memoir of the author, it may be
PREFACE.
Xlll
well to reproduce here the " few Biographical Records "
which have been handed down to us by his nephew John ;
at the same time it may be desirable to add some little
account of the eminent naturalists as well those to whom
his letters were addressed, as those who have furnished a
worthy supplement to his work in the " Observations " and
" Calendar."
m
BACK VIEW OF THE RESIDENCE, AT SELBORNE, OF
THE REV. GILBERT WHITE.
" GILBERT WHITE was the eldest son of John White, of
Selborne, Esq., and of Anne the daughter of Thomas Holt,
rector of Streatham in Surrey. He was born at Selborne
on July 18, 1720 ; and received his school-education at
Basingstoke, under the Rev. Thomas Warton, vicar of that
place, and father of those two distinguished literary cha-
racters, Dr. Joseph Warton, master of Winchester School ;
and Mr. Thomas Warton, poetry-professor at Oxford. He
was admitted at Oriel College, Oxford, in December,
1739, and took his degree of bachelor of arts in June,
1743. In March, 1744, he was elected fellow of his
college. He became master of arts in October, 1746, and
was admitted one of the senior proctors of the University
in April, 1752. Being of an unambitious temper, and
xiv PREFACE.
strongly attached to the charms of rural scenery, he early
fixed his residence in his native village, where he spent the
greater part of his life in literary occupations, and especially
in the study of nature. This he followed with patient
assiduity, and a mind ever open to the lessons of piety and
benevolence which such a study is so well calculated to
afford. Though several occasions offered of settling upon
a college living, he could never persuade himself to quit
the beloved spot, which was, indeed, a peculiarly happy
situation for an observer. He was much esteemed by a
select society of intelligent and worthy friends, to whom he
paid occasional visits. Thus his days passed, tranquil and
serene, with scarcely any other vicissitudes than those of
the seasons, till they closed at a mature age on June 26,
1798."
Gilbert White lived and died a bachelor, and it is to be
regretted that no portrait remains to preserve a record of
his personal appearance.
His brother John, to whom frequent reference is made in
the succeeding pages, was at one time Vicar of Blackburn,
in Lancashire. He afterwards became resident at Gibraltar,
where he made large collections for a Natural History of the
place, from the unpublished manuscript of which an extract
is given at page 282. He is honourably mentioned by
Pennant in his " Literary Life," as having rendered him
material assistance in connection with the birds and fishes
of Gibraltar.
Another brother, Thomas (to whose observations, made at
his house at South Lambeth, our author occasionally refers) ,
was a wholesale ironmonger in London ; but quitting busi-
ness with an ample fortune ; devoted much of his time to
literary pursuits, especially on subjects connected with me-
teorology and natural history. He was a Fellow of the
Royal Society, and author of numerous essays which ap-
peared in the ' ' Gentleman's Magazine " between the years
1780 and 1790, under the signature of T. H. W. Among
these a series of articles on the trees of Great Britain are
particularly deserving of notice, for the extensive informa-
tion, good taste, and variety of reading which they display.
PREFACE xv
A third brother, Benjamin, the publisher of the first
edition of the present work, was during much of the latter
half of the past century the principal publisher of English
books on Natural History. On the death of Gilbert he
succeeded to the estate at Selborne, and transferred his
business to his second son, John, who continued it until
within a few years of the present time. From this estab-
lishment emanated, among many other important publica-
tions, most of the works of Ellis, Pennant, Montagu, Latham,
Donovan, Andrews, the elder Sowerby, Curtis, Lightfoot,
and other well-known naturalists. The house in which the
business was carried on was originally distinguished, accord-
ing to the fashion of the times, by the sign of the Horace's
Head, a misreading of which gave rise to a whimsical mis-
take on the part of Scopoli, who, in dedicating the several
plates of his " Delicise Florae et Faunae Insubricae" to
various patrons of natural history, inscribed one of them
as published " Auspiciis DD. DD. Beniamini White, et
Horatii Head, Bibliopol. Londinensium." It may be added,
that in his " Vitas suae Vices," published at the end of the
third and last part of the work just quoted, the same writer
enumerates among the " eruditi viri cum quibus commerciuin
litterarium colui," the name of " D. White, ex Gibraltaria."
Many passages in the present work prove how highly Sco-
poli was esteemed by our author, with whose family these
circumstances, trivial as they are, serve in some degree to
connect his name.
In Gilbert White's diaries mention is also made of a
" brother Harry." He too was in the church, and rector
of Fyfield, near Andover, in the county of Hants, whence
one of the letters to Daines Barrington is dated, and where,
as appears by various references in the course of the volume,
a series of meteorological observations were made for com-
parison with those registered at Selborne, South Lambeth,
and Lyndon, in the county of Rutland.
In the commencement of his tenth letter to Pennant, the
earliest in date of the entire series, Gilbert White laments
the want of neighbours whose studies led them towards the
pursuit of natural knowledge. But from his continued cor-
xvi PREFACE.
respondence with the relatives just enumerated, from his
occasional visits to most of them, and from the return of
those visits to himself, (for his house, although that of a
bachelor, was always open to his family and friends,) he
must, in his latter years, have felt this want much less
sensibly than at the period when it was noted as an apology
for the slender progress which he then conceived himself
to have made in the science. Few men have had the good
fortune to possess so many near connexions engaged in
pursuits so congenial with their own.
THOMAS PENNANT, the correspondent for many years of Gil-
bert White and the esteemed friend to whom the first series
of his Letters on the Natural History of his native place were
addressed, was among the most active of the scientific and
literary characters of his day. At the commencement of
his correspondence with White, he was busily engaged in
the preparation of the octavo edition of his British Zoology:
the first edition of that work had preceded it but a few
years ; and it was quickly followed by others ; and by other
works on zoology, and on antiquities, and by tours, topo-
graphies, and other productions ; all of which were deser-
vedly popular. For more than forty years his pen was
never idle. Industrious himself, he was the cause also of
industry in others ; and the enumeration which he gives of
the services he did to the professors of the art of engraving
by the multitude of plates executed by them for his several
works, while it furnishes a list of the principal of his pro-
ductions, will also afford some idea of the extent and variety
of his labours.
British Zoology, folio . . . .132
British Zoology, octavo or quarto . . 284
History of Quadrupeds .... 54
Tour in Scotland, the three volumes . 134
Journey to London .... 23
Tour in Wales, two volumes . .53
Moses Griffiths' Supplemental Plates . 10
Some Account of London, second edition . 15
PREFACE. xvii
Indian Zoology . . . . .17
Genera of Birds . . . . .16
Arctic Zoology, two volumes . . .26
Systematic Index to De Buffon . . 1
Lightfoot's Flora Scotica, two volumes . 37
802
Of many of these works several editions were required,
and the superintendence of them added to the demands on
him for continual devotion to literary pursuits. Many
minor works were also published by him, including nu-
merous papers in the " Philosophical Transactions. " He
maintained too an active correspondence both at home and
abroad throughout the whole of his life; and numbered
among his friends the most distinguished men in the several
branches of knowledge which he cultivated. Linnaeus was
among his earliest correspondents ; and with Pallas he
was in frequent communication.
" I am often astonished," he says, in his Literary Life
of himself, ft at the multiplicity of my publications, espe-
cially when I reflect on the various duties it has fallen to
my lot to discharge, as father of a family, landlord of a
small but numerous tenantry, and a not inactive magistrate.
I had a great share of health during the literary part of my
days. Much of this was owing to the riding exercise of
my extensive tours, to my manner of living, and to my
temperance. I go to rest at ten ; and rise winter and
summer at seven, and shave regularly at the same hour,
being a true misopogon. I avoid the meal of excess, a
supper ; and my soul rises with vigour to its employs, and,
I trust, does not disappoint the end of its Creator."
Pennant died in 1798, in the seventy- third year of his
age ; having survived for more than seven years the literary
death which he had anticipated for himself in 1791.
DAINES BAERINGTON, honourable by birth and respected
for his talents, was well suited, by the pursuits to which
from choice he had devoted himself, to become the favourite
xviii PREFACE.
correspondent of an observer like Gilbert White. The
legal studies which he had originally cultivated as a pro-
fessional duty, and in which he had been so successful as to
have merited the office of recorder of Bristol, and to have
become subsequently a Welsh judge, were eventually laid
aside by him, although not until after they had fostered in
him an attachment to antiquarian pursuits which he retained
through life so strongly as to entitle him to be distinguished
among his fellow-students in that department of knowledge
as a vice-president of the Society of Antiquaries. To the
" Transactions " of that body he was a frequent contributor.
He also made numerous communications to the Royal
Society, which were printed in the " Philosophical Trans-
actions/' Many of them were afterwards republished by
himself in a separate form, under the title of " Miscellanies ; "
a work alluded to with satisfaction by our historian in his
Letter LI. In his essays Barrington availed himself freely
of the information imparted to him by White, whose autho-
rity he repeatedly quotes, and whose merits as a "well
read, ingenious, and observant " naturalist he is ever ready
to acknowledge.
A large proportion of the essays in the ' ' Miscellanies "
are on subjects of natural history; and in many of them
Daines Barrington was the advocate of views directly opposed
to those of our author's other correspondent, Pennant.
Thus, for instance, while Pennant felt a full conviction as
to the migration of many birds, Barrington was most
sceptical on the subject; and it is scarcely to be doubted
that his letters to Gilbert White tended to keep alive and
to increase the suspicions which the historian of Selborne
always entertained that the little creatures whose presence
delighted him during the summer, were still at hand, though
hidden from him, in the winter. Another point on which
his two correspondents disagreed was as to the authority
which they attributed to Ray and to Linnaeus ; and White
was evidently quite aware of the difference of their feelings
on this subject, humouring them so far as to accommo-
date himself to the wishes of each when addressing him in
particular. When sending to Pennant, in his Letter XVI.,
PREFACE. xix
a list of the summer birds of passage, the Latin names
which he uses are " Linnaei nomina;" in his correspondence
with Barrington, Letter I. and elsewhere, he designates
his birds, scientifically, by " Raii Nomina." Barrington
argued so warmly against the deficiencies of the Linnsean
characters, and advocated so strongly the excellences of
our countryman, John Ray, that he is carried on by the
discussion in which he was engaged to inquire, no doubt in
his estimation triumphantly, " After this comparison can
there be a doubt whether the English botanist should con-
sult Ray or Linnasus for an English plant ? "
WILLIAM MARKWICK, who afterwards took the name of
Eversfield, derived from his residence in the country op-
portunities of observing nature, which he embraced with
a readiness worthy of a pupil of Gilbert White. His
" Naturalist's Calendar " affords ample evidence of his
perseverance in attending to and noting occurrences in
both the organized kingdoms of the creation ; and the
remarks subjoined by him, in numerous instances, to our
-author's " Observations on various Parts of Nature," show
him to have been a sensible as well as a diligent observer.
He communicated to the Linnean Society various essays
on subjects of interest to zoologists, which were published
in the earlier volumes of the " Transactions " of that body ;
the first of them, " On the Migration of certain Birds, and
on other Matters relating to the Feathered Tribes/' included
a table of the annual appearance and disappearance of
certain birds, which was continued to the end of 1794 in a
subsequent communication, entitled "Aves Sussexienses ;
or, a Catalogue of Birds found in the County of Sussex,
with Remarks." His last paper consisted of " Observations
on the Clover Weevil," and was published in 1801. His
death took place in 1813.
DR. JOHN AIKIN is known both as the author of numerous
and popular productions, and as one of an eminently literary
and scientific family. He dedicated his " Calendar of
Nature" to his sister, Mrs. Barbauld, referring to her
xx PREFACE.
children's books as having raised the character of such pub-
lications. "Had it been designed," he says, speaking of
own work, " for a different class of readers, a larger compass
might have been taken, and a more learned and elevated
character of writing have been aimed at, yet it must still
have remained essentially the same; and its merit must
still have been that of compilation. The plan itself is a
borrowed one ; and you must certainly recollect its model
in one of your own little books, where, in a very entertain-
ing manner, you give a brief description of the several
months, formed of some of the most striking circumstances
attending each. What you have done for a child three or
four years old, I have attempted for young people from ten
to fourteen/'
In editing from the MSS. of White, he carried yet higher
his desires of extending acquaintance with natural history ;
the work compiled by him from that source being adapted
to students of adult powers, and embodying many facts
which were altogether new, at the time of their publication,
to naturalists generally. Founded on the observation of
nature their interest is calculated to endure.
JAMES EDMUND HARTING.
Lincoln's Inn Fields, Sept. 1874.
ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST
EDITION.
HE author of the following letters takes the
liberty, with all proper deference, of laying
before the public his idea of parochial history,
which, he thinks, ought to consist of natural
productions and occurrences as well as anti-
quities. He is also of opinion that if stationary men would
pay some attention to the districts on which they reside,
and would publish their thoughts respecting the objects that
surround them, from such materials might be drawn the
most complete county-histories, which are still wanting in
several parts of this kingdom, and in particular in the county
of Southampton.
And here he seizes the first opportunity, though a late
one, of returning his most grateful acknowledgments to the
reverend the president and the reverend and worthy the
fellows of Magdalen College in the university of Oxford, for
their liberal behaviour in permitting their archives to be
searched by a member of their own society, so far as the
evidences therein contained might respect the parish and
priory of Selbornc. To that gentleman also, and his
assistant, whose labours and attention could only be equalled
by the very kind manner in which they were bestowed,
many and great obligations are also due.
Of the authenticity of the documents above mentioned
there can be no doubt, since they consist of the identical
deeds and records that were removed to the college from the
Priory at the time of its dissolution ; and, being carefully
xxii ADVERTISEMENT.
copied on the spot, may be depended on as genuine ; and,
never having been made public before, may gratify the
curiosity of the antiquary, as well as establish the credit of
the history.
If the writer should at all appear to have induced any of
his readers to pay a more ready attention to the wonders of
the creation,, too frequently overlooked as common occur-
rences ; or if he should by any means, through his researches,
have lent an helping hand towards the enlargement of the
boundaries of historical and topographical knowledge ; or if
he should have thrown some small light upon ancient customs
and manners, and especially on those that were monastic ;
his purpose will be fully answered. But if he should not
have been successful in any of these his intentions, yet there
remains this consolation behind — that these, his pursuits, by
keeping the body and mind employed, have, under Provi-
dence, contributed to much health and cheerfulness of spirits,
even to old age ; and, what still adds to his happiness, have
led him to the knowledge of a circle of gentlemen whose
intelligent communications, as they have afforded him much
pleasing information, so, could he natter himself with a con-
tinuation of them, would they ever be deemed a matter of
singular satisfaction and improvement.
Selborne. •
January 1st, 1783.
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF
SELBORNE.
THE NATUKAL HISTOEY OF
SELBORNE.
SELBORNE, PROM DORTON.
See, Selborne spreads her boldest beauties round,
The varied valley, and the mountain ground,
Wildly majestic ! What is all the pride
Of flats, with loads of ornament supplied ? —
Unpleasing, tasteless, impotent expense,
Compared with Nature's rude magnificence. WHITE.
LETTER I.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
HE parish of SELBOENE lies in the extreme
eastern corner of the county of Hampshire,
bordering on the county of Sussex, and not
far from the county of Surrey ; is about fifty
miles south-west of London, in latitude 51,
and near midway between the towns of Alton and Peters-
E
2 NATURAL HISTORY
field. Being very large and extensive, it abuts on twelve
parishes, two of which are in Sussex, viz. Trotton and
Rogate. If you begin from the south and proceed west-
ward, the adjacent parishes are Emshot, Newton Valence,
Faringdon, Harteley Mauduit,1 Great Ward le ham,2 Kings-
ley, Hedleigh, Bramshot, Trotton, Rogate, Lysse, and
Greatham. The soils of this district are almost as various
and diversified as the views and aspects. The high part to
the south-west consists of a vast hill of chalk, rising 300 ft.
above the village ; and is divided into a sheep down, the
high wood, and a long hanging wood called ,The Hanger.
/ The covert of this eminence is altogether beech, the most
lovely of all forest trees, whether we consider its smooth
rind or bark, its glossy foliage, or graceful pendulous
boughs. The down, or sheep-walk, is a pleasing park-like
spot, of about one mile by half that space, jutting out on the
verge of the hill country, where it begins to break down
into the plains, and commanding a very engaging view,
being an assemblage of hill, dale, woodlands, heath, and
water. The prospect is bounded to the south-east and
east by the vast range of mountains called the Sussex
Downs, by Guild Down near Guildford, and by the Downs
round Dorking and Ryegate in Surrey, to the north-east ;
which, altogether, with the country beyond Alton and Farn-
ham, form a noble and extensive outline.
1 Mr. Bennett, in a foot-note to this passage, which appeared in his
edition of the present work, published in 1837, states that in the paro-
chial registers the orthography is Harteley Maudytt. Mauduit, used
by Gilbert White, is, however, a more usual reading of Malduith, the
name of the earliest Norman lord, which was used subsequently to the
Conquest as an adjunct to the Saxon appellation, for the purpose of dis-
tinguishing this Harteley from the other Hartleys in the same county to
the north of it. — ED.
2 The orthography in the text, though formal in appearance, was
deliberately adopted by the author, who, in his first edition, inserted all
deviations from it as errata ; it is, consequently, preserved throughout.
Wordlam, according to Mr. Bennett, is a pronunciation not unfrequently
used in the neighbourhood : but Worldham is the more ordinary name.
And in this case he suspects that the vulgar are right ; Werildeham,
the oldest name which he could find for it, belonging to an era prior to
the erection in England of Norman castles. — ED.
OF SHLBOPtfE. 3
At the foot of this hill, one stage or step from the up-
lands, lies the village, which consists of one single straggling -,
street, three quarters of a mile in length, in a sheltered vale,
and running parallel with The Hanger. The houses are
divided from the hill by a vein of stiff clay (good wheat
land) , yet stand on a rock of white stone, little in appear-
ance removed from chalk ; but seeming so far from being
calcareous, that it endures extreme heat. Yet that the
freestone still preserves somewhat that is analogous to
chalk, is plain from the beeches, which descend as low as
those rocks extend, and no farther, and thrive as well on
them, where the ground is steep, as on the chalks.
The cart-way of the village divides, in a remarkable
manner, two very incongruous soils. To the south-west is
a rank clay, that requires the labour of years to render it
mellow; while the gardens to the north-east, and small
enclosures behind, consist of a warm, forward, crumbling
mould, called black malm, which seems highly saturated with
vegetable and animal manure ; and these may perhaps have
been the original site of the town, while the woods and
coverts might extend down to the opposite bank.
At each end of the village, which runs from south-east
to north-west, arises a small rivulet : that at the north-west
end frequently fails ; but the other is a fine perennial spring,
little influenced by drought or wet seasons, called Well-
head.1 This breaks out of some high grounds joining to
Nore Hill, a noble chalk promontory, remarkable for sending
forth two streams into two different seas. The one to the
south becomes a branch of the Arun, running to Arundel,
and so falling into the British Channel : the other to the
north, the Selborne stream, makes one branch of the Wey ; ~ » ^^
and, meeting the Black Down stream at Hedleigh, and the
Alton and Farnham stream at Tilford Bridge, swells into a ^~
considerable river, navigable at Godalming ; from whence it
1 This spring produced, September 14, 1781, after a severe hot sum-
mer, and a preceding dry spring and winter, nine gallons of water in a
minute, which is 540 in an hour, and 12,960, or 216 hogsheads, in twenty-
four hours, or one natural day. At this time many of the wells failed,
and all the ponds in the vales were dry. — G-. W.
4 NATURAL HISTORY
passes to Guildford, and so into the Thames at Weybridge;
and thus at the Nore into the German Ocean.
Our wells, at an average, run to about sixty-three feet,
and when sunk to that depth seldom fail ; but produce a
fine limpid water soft to the taste, and much commended by
| those who drink the pure element, but which does not lather
_ well with soap.1
To the north-west, north, and east of the village, is a
range of fair enclosures, consisting of what is called white
malm, a sort of rotten or rubble stone, which, when turned
^ ^ up to the frost and rain, moulders to pieces, and becomes
, * manure to itself.2
Still on to the north-east, and a step lower, is a kind of
' ^ white land, neither chalk nor clay, neither fit for pasture
< nor for the plough, yet kindly for hops, which root deep into
the freestone, and have their poles and wood for charcoal /
growing just at hand. This white soil produces the
brightest hops.
As the parish still inclines down towards Wolmer Forest,
at the juncture of the clays and sand, the soil becomes a wet
- - sandy loam, remarkable for timber, and infamous for roads.
The oaks of Temple and Blackmoor stand high in the esti-
mation of purveyors, and have furnished much naval timber ;
\ while the trees on the freestone grow large, but are what
workmen call shaky, and so brittle as often to fall to pieces
in sawing.
Beyond the sandy loam the soil becomes a hungry lean
sand, till it mingles with the forest, and will produce little
without the assistance of lime and turnirjs_. ?
1 Although this water is said to be soft to the taste, it is nevertheless
what would be usually called hard, the test of which, as pointed out by
Mr. Rennie, is its not producing a lather with soap, or with soap dis-
solved in spirit of wine, because it contains sulphate of lime, the sul-
phuric acid in which, uniting with the soda in the soap, sets free the
tallow, composed of the margaric and oleic acids ; and these acids, unit-
ing with the lime thus set free, form a soap that will not dissolve in
water. — ED.
2 This soil produces good wheat and clover. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 5
LETTER II.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
"N the court of Norton farm-house, a manor
farm to the north-west of the village, on the
white malms, stood within these twenty
years a broad-leaved elm, or wych hazel,
Ulmus folio latissimo scabro of Ray,1 which,
though it had lost a considerable leading bough in the great
storm in the year 1703, equal to a moderate tree, yet, when
felled, contained eight loads of timber; and, being too
bulky for a carriage, was sawn off at seven feet above the
butt, where it measured near eight feet in the diameter.
This elm I mention to show to what a bulk planted elms may
attain, as this tree must certainly have been such from its
situation.
In the centre of the village, and near the church, is a
square piece of ground surrounded by houses, and vulgarly
called Ike Plestor.'2 In the midst of this spot stood, in old ^^
times, a vast oak, with a short squat body, and huge hori- ,^
zontal arms extending almost to the extremity of the area. ^
This venerable tree, surrounded with stone steps, and seats \
above them, was the delight of old and young, and a place of
much resort in summer evenings ; where the former sat in
grave debate, while the latter frolicked and danced before
1 Ulmus montanus of modern botanists, and the common elm of the
north of England and Scotland. It is a valuable timber tree, and of
very different growth from that which is generally termed the common
elm, Ulmus campestris, seldom presenting so fine a bole as the latter, or
attaining so large a size. — ED.
2 The Plestor, originally called Pleystow, or play -place, was granted, \xrUw
as it subsequently appears, to the prior and convent of Selborne, in 1271, (
by Sir Adam Gurdon and wife, as " all his right and claim to a certain °
place (placed) called ' la Pleystow ' in the village aforesaid, ' in liberam, \J^™^
puram, et perpetuam elemosinam?" It is still used as a place for re- ^^^^
creation by the village children. — ED.
6 NATURAL HISTORY
them . Long might it have stood, had not the amazing tempest
in 17 Oil overturned it at once, to the infinite regret of the
inhabitants, and the vicar, who bestowed several pounds in
setting it in its place again: but all his care could not
avail; the tree sprouted for a time, then withered and died.
This oak I mention to show to what a bulk planted oaks
also may arrive : and planted this tree must certainly have
been, as will appear from what will be said further con-
cerning this area when we enter on the antiquities of Sel-
borne.1
On the Blackmoor estate there is a small wood called
Losel's, of a few acres, that was lately furnished with a set
of oaks of a peculiar growth and great value ; they were
tall and taper like firs, but, standing near together, had very
small heads, only a little brush, without any large limbs."
About twenty years ago the bridge at the Toy, near Hampton
Court, being much decayed, some trees were wanted for the
repairs that were fifty feet long without bough, and would
measure twelve inches diameter at the little end. Twenty
such trees did a purveyor find in this little wood, with this
advantage, that many of them answered the description at
sixty feet. These trees were sold for twenty pounds a
piece.
In the centre of this grove there stood an oak, which,
though shapely and tall on the whole, bulged out into a
large excrescence about the middle of the stem. On this a
pair of ravens had fixed their residence for such a series of
1 The Plestor, as it subsequently appears, measured about forty -four
yards by thirty-six, and the oak, whose branches nearly overshadowed
this large space, is conjectured by Gilbert White to have been, at the
time when it was blown down, four hundred and thirty-two_ years old.
—ED.
2 We have here a hint at the different effects of shelter and exposure
on the growth of trees. Those in the interior of woods generally have
their stems upright, their bark glossy, their tops small and thinly pro-
Hided with branches, and their roots, in the same way, spare and scanty,
but in due proportion to the tops. Those, on the other hand, in exposed
situations, have their stems stout and short, their bark thick and coarse,
their tops spreading, and their roots in the same way throwing them-
selves out in every direction. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 7
years, that the oak was distinguished by the title of The
Raven Tree. Many were the attempts of the neighbouring
youths to get at this eyry : the difficulty whetted their
inclinations, and each was ambitious of surmounting the
arduous task. But, when they arrived at the swelling, it
jutted out so in their way, and was so far beyond their
grasp, that the most daring lads were awed, and acknow-
ledged the undertaking to be too hazardous. So the ravens
built on, nest upon nest, in perfect security, till the fatal
THE RAVEN.
day arrived in which the wood was to be levelled. It was
in the month of February, when those birds usually sit.
The saw was applied to the butt, the wedges were inserted
into the opening, the woods echoed to the heavy blows of
the beetle or mallet, the tree nodded to its fall ; but still
the dam sat on. At last, when it gave way, the bird was
flung from her nest; and, though her parental affection
deserved a better fate, was whipped down by the twigs,
which brought her dead to the ground.
NATURAL HI8TORY
I
LETTER III.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
HE ^ssil_shells of this district, and sorts of
stone, such, as have fallen within my obser-
vation, must not be passed over in silence.
And first I must mention, as a great curi-
osity, a specimen that was ploughed up in
the chalky fields, near the side of the Down, and giyen to
me for the singularity of its appearance, which, to an jn-
curious eye, seems like a petrified fish of about four inches
long, the cardo passing for a head and mouth. It is in
reality a bivalve of the Linnsean genus of Mytilus and the
species of Orista galli; called by Lister, Rastellum; by
Rurnphius, Ostreum plicatum minus ; by D'Argenville, Auris
porci, s. Crista galli; and by those who make collections,
cock's comb. Though I applied to several such in London,
I never could meet with an entire specimen; nor could
I ever find in books any engraving from a perfect one.
In the superb museum at Leicester House,1 permission
was given me to examine for this article ; and though I was
disappointed as to the fossil, I was highly gratified with the
sight of several of the shells themselves in high preserva-
tion. This bivalve is only known to inhabit the Indian
ocean, where it fixes itself to a zoophyte, known by the
name Gorgonia. The curious foldings of the suture the
1 This was originally the property of Sir Ashton Lever, and long
known as the Leverian Museum. Pennant characterized it as "the
most astonishing collection of the subjects of natural history ever col-
lected, in so short a space, by any individual." The specimens of
natural history and of art, which it contained, were exhibited for many
years, but were finally disposed of by auction, in 1806. Some idea may
be formed of the extent of the collection at that time by the duration
of the sale, which lasted for sixty -five days, and by the number of the
lots, which amounted to 7879. — ED
OF SELBORNE. 9
one into the other, the alternate flutings or grooves, and
the curved form of my specimen being much easier expressed
OSTREA CARINATA.
by the pencil than by words, I have caused it to be drawn
and engraved.1
Gornua Ammonis are very common about this village.2
1 This is not the analogue of the cock's comb oyster, but belongs to
a different species which has not any living analogue, so far as is known.
The figures given above, which are copied from those of the original
edition, represent a shell of the Ostrcea carinata of Lamarck, so called on
account of the strong ridge or keel along the middle of each of its
valves. Though both are plaited oysters, the plaits or folds in each
are disposed in a different manner : nTthe cock's comb oyster they are
in the longitudinal direction of the shell, which, moreover, is rounded in
its general outline ; in the keeled oyster they pass transversely on each
side from the ridge or keel.
The statement in the text, that White's specimens were obtained in
chalky fields, renders it necessary, as Mr. Bennett has judiciously re-
marked, to caution the reader against regarding it as a chalk fossil.
The fields below the chalk downs at Selborne, though white in the
appearance of their soil — locally termed white malm — belong in truth
to the formation known to geologists by the singularly inappropriate
name of green sand. To this formation the keeled oyster is peculiar ;
and it appears even to be limited, as a fossil, to the upper green sand,
the stratum on which the village of Selborne is built, and of which the
immediately adjacent enclosures consist. — ED.
2 The Rev. J. Mitford has said the same thing of Keynsham, between
Bath and Bristol, adding that " This has given rise to a fabulous legend,
which says that St. Keyna, from whom the place takes its name, resided
here in a solitary wood, full of venomous serpents, and her prayers
converted them into stones, which still retain their shape." — See Espri-
ellrfs Letters from England, vol. iii. p. 362. — ED.
10 NATURAL EI8TORY
As we were cutting an inclining path up The Hanger, the
labourers found them frequently on that steep, just under
the soil, in the chalk, and of a considerable size. In the lane
above Well-head, in the way to Emshot, they abound in the
bank in a darkish sort of marl ; and are usually very small
and soft : but in Clay's Pond, a little farther on, at the end
of the pit, where the soil is dug out for manure, I have
occasionally observed them of large dimensions, perhaps
fourteen or sixteen inches in diameter. But as these did
not consist of firm stone, but were formed of a kind of terra
lapidosa, or hardened clay, as soon as they were exposed to
the rains and frost they mouldered away. These seemed
as if they were a very recent production.1
In the chalk-pit, at the north-west end of The Hanger,
large Nautili are sometimes observed.
In the very thickest strata of our freestone, and at con-
siderable depths, well-diggers often find large scallops, or
Pectines, having both shells deeply striated, and ridged
and furrowed alternately. They are highly impregnated
with, if not wholly composed of, the stone of the quarry.
LETTER IV.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
S in a former letter the freestone of this place
has been only mentioned incidentally, I shall
here become more particular.
This stone is in great request for hearth-
stones, and the beds of ovens ; and in lining
of lime-kilns it turns to good account : for the workmen
use sandy loam instead of mortar ; the sand of which fluxes,'2
1 They were in all probability casts of the ammonites, and not the
shells themselves. — ED.
2 There may probably be also in the chalk itself, that is burnt for
lime, a proportion of sand ; for few chalks are so pure as to have none.
— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 11
and runs by the intense heat, and so cases over the whole
face of the kiln with a strong vitrified coat like glass, that
it is well preserved from injuries of weather, and endures
thirty or forty years. When chiselled smooth, it makes
elegant fronts for houses, equal in colour and grain to the
Bath stone ; and superior in one respect, that, when sea-
soned, it does not scale. Decent chimney-pieces are worked
from it of much closer and finer grain than Portland ; and
rooms are floored with it ; but it proves rather too soft for
this purpose. It is a freestone, cutting in all directions ;
yet has something of a grain parallel with the horizon, and
therefore should not be surbedded, but laid in the same
position that it grows in the quarry.1 On the ground
abroad this firestone will not succeed for pavements, be-
cause, probably, some degree of saltness prevailing within
it, the rain tears the slabs to pieces." Though this stone
is too hard to be acted on by vinegar, yet both the white
part, and even the blue rag, ferment strongly in mineral
acids. Though the white stone will not bear wet, yet in
every quarry, at intervals, there are thin strata of blue rag,
which resist rain and frost, and are excellent for pitching of
stables, paths and courts ; and for building of dry walls
against banks, a valuable species of fencing, much in use in
this village ; and for mending of roads. This rag is rugged
and stubborn, and will not hew to a smooth face ; but is
very durable : yet, as these strata are shallow and lie deep,
large quantities cannot be procured but at considerable ex-
pense. Among the blue rags turn up some blocks tinged
with a stain of yellow, or rust colour, which seem to be
nearly as lasting as the blue ; and every now and then balls
of a friable substance, like rust of iron, called rust balls.
In Wolmer Forest I see but one sort of stone, called by
1 " To surbed stone is to set it edgewise, contrary to the posture it
had in the quarry," says Dr. Plot, Oxfordsh. p. 77. But surbedding
does not succeed in our dry walls ; neither do we use it so in ovens,
though he says it is best for Teynton stone. — Gr. W.
2 Firestone is full of salts, and has no sulphur: must be close-
grained, and have no interstices. Nothing supports fire like salts ; salt-
atone perishes exposed to wet and frost. — Plot's Staff", p. 152. G. W.
12 NATURAL HISTORY
the workmen sand, or forest, stone. This is generally* of
the colour of rusty iron, and might probably be worked as
-iron ore ; is very hard and heavy, and of a firm compact
texture, and composed of a small roundish crystalline grit,
cemented together by a brown, terrene, ferruginous mat-
ter ; will not cut without difficulty, nor easily strike fire
with steel. Being often found in broad flat pieces, it makes
good pavement for paths about houses, never becoming
slippery in frost or rain ; is excellent for dry walls ; and is
sometimes used in buildings. In many parts of that waste
it lies scattered on the surface of the ground ; but is dug
on Weaver's Down, a vast hill on the eastern verge of that
forest, where the pits are shallow, and the stratum thin.
This stone is imperishable.
From a notion of rendering their work the more elegant,
and giving it a finish, masons chip this stone into small
fragments about the size of the head of a large nail ; and
then stick the pieces into the wet mortar along the joints
of their freestone walls : this embellishment carries an odd
appearance, and has occasioned strangers sometimes to ask
us pleasantly, " whether we fastened our walls together
with tenpenny nails ?"
LETTER Y.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
the singularities of this place, the
two rocky hollow lanes, the one to Alton,
and the other to the forest, deserve our
attention. These roads, running through
the malm lands, are, by the traffic of ages
and the fretting of water, worn down through the first
stratum of our freestone, and partly through the second ;
so that they look more like water-courses than roads ; and
are bedded with naked rag for furlongs together. In many
OF SELBORNE.
13
places they are reduced sixteen or eighteen feet beneath
the level of the fields ; and after floods, and in frosts, ex-
hibit very grotesque and wild appearances, from the tangled
roots that are twisted among the strata, and from the tor-
rents rushing down their broken sides ; and especially
when those cascades are frozen into icicles, hanging in all
the fanciful shapes of frost-work. These rugged gloomy
scenes affright the ladies when they peep down into them
HOLLOW LANE AND BRIDGE, NEAR NORTON.
from the paths above, and make timid horsemen shudder
while they ride along them ; but delight the naturalist with
their various botany, and particularly with the curious
F 'dices with which they abound.
The manor of Selborne, was it strictly looked after, with
all its kindly aspects, and all its sloping coverts, would
swarm with game ; even now, hares, partridges, and
pheasants abound ; and in old days woodcocks were as
plentiful. There are few quails, because they more affect
14
NATURAL HISTORY
open fields than enclosures : after harvest some few land-
rails are seen.
The parish of Selborne, by taking in so much of the
forest, is a vast district. Those who tread the bounds are
employed part of three days in the business, and are of
opinion that the outline, in all its curves and indentings,
does not comprise less than thirty miles.
The village stands in a sheltered spot, secured by The
Hanger from the strong westerly winds. The air is soft,
but rather moist from the effluvia of so many trees ; 1 yet
perfectly healthy, and free from agues.
The quantity of rain that falls on it is very considerable,
as may be supposed in so woody and mountainous a
district. As my experience in measuring the water is but
of short date, I am not qualified to give the mean quantity.2
I only know that
From May
From Jan.
From Jan.
From Jan.
From Jan.
From Jan.
From Jan. 1
From Jan. 1
Inch. Htmd.
1779, to the end of the year, there fell 28 37 !
1780, to Jan. 1 1781 . . . 27 32
1781, to Jan. 1 1782 . . . 30 71
1782, to Jan. 1783 . . . 50 26 !
1783, to Jan. 1784 . . 33 71
1784, to Jan. 1785 . . . 33 80
1785, to Jan. 1786 . . . 31 55
1786, to Jan. 1787 39 57
The village of Selborne, and large hamlet of Oakhanger,
1 This effect of trees is fully treated of in the Letter to Daines
Barrington, numbered XXIX. — ED.
2 A very intelligent gentleman [Thomas Barker, of ancient family in
the county of Rutland — ED.] assures me (and he speaks from upwards of
forty years' experience) that the mean rain of any place cannot be
ascertained till a person has measured it for a very long period. " If I
had only measured the rain," says he, " for the four first years, from
1740 to 1743, I should have said the mean rain at Lyndon was 16£ in.
for the year ; if from 1740 to 1750, 18£ inches. The mean rain before
1763 was 20$ ; from 1763 and since, 25£ ; from 1770 to 1780, 26. If
only 1773, 1774, and 1775, had been measured, Lyndon mean rain
would have been called 32 in." — G. W.
Averaging fifty per cent, more than Lyndon, and upwards of fifty
per cent, more than the neighbourhood of London, it may well be said
that the quantity of rain that falls at Selborne is very considerable.
The excess, as is stated in the text, is altogether attributable to local
circumstances. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 15
with the single farms, and many scattered houses along the
verge of the forest,, contains upwards of 670 inhabitants.1
We abound with poor; many of whom are sober and
industrious, and live comfortably in good stone or brick
cottages, which are glazed, and have chambers above t.
stairs : mud buildings we have none. Besides the employ-
ment from husbandry, the men work in hop gardens, of
which we have many ; and fell and bark timber. In the
1 A State of the Parish of SELBORNE, taken Oct. 4, 1783.
The number of tenements or families, 136.
The number of inhabitants in the street is . . .313
in the rest of the parish . 363
Total 676 ; near five inhabitants to. each tenement.
In the time of the Kev. Gilbert White, vicar, who died in 1727-8,
the number of inhabitants was computed at about 500.
Average of Baptisms for Sixty Years.
Males. Females.
From 1720 to 1729, both years inclusive . 6*9 6' 12'9
1730 to 1739 . . . .8-2 7'1 15'3
1740 to 1749 . . . . 9-2 6 '6 15'8
1750 to 1759 . . . .7-6 8'1 15'7
1760 to 1769 . . . .9-1 8'9 18-
1770 to 1779 .... 10-5 9'8 20'3
Total of baptisms of males . . 515
females . . 465
Total of baptisms from 1720 to 1779, both inclusive, sixty years, 980.
Average of Burials for Sixty Years.
Males. Females.
From 1720 to 1729, both years inclusive . 4'8 5'1 9'9
1730 to 1739 . . . .4-8 5'8 10'6
1740 to 1749 .... 4-6 3'8 8'4
1750 to 1759 . . . .4-9 5'1 10*
1760 to 1769 . . . .6-9 6'5 13'4
1770 to 1779 . . . .5-5 6"2 11-7
Total of burials of males . . . 315
females. . . 325
Total of burials from 1720 to 1779, both inclusive, sixty years, 640.
Baptisms exceed burials by more than one-third.
Baptisms of males exceed females by one-tenth, or one in ten.
Burials of females exceed males by one in thirty.
It appears that a child, born and bred in this parish, has an equal
chance to live above forty years.
Twins thirteen times, many of whom dying young have lessened the
chances for life.
Chances for life in men and women appear to be equal.
16
NATURAL HISTORY
spring and summer the women weed the corn; and enjoy a
second harvest in September by hop-picking. Formerly,
in the dead months they availed themselves greatly by
spinning wool, for making of barragons, a genteel corded
stuff, much in vogue at that time for summer wear ; and
chiefly manufactured at Alton, a neighbouring town, by
some of the people called Quakers : but from circumstances
this trade is at an end.1
The inhabitants enjoy a good share of health and lon-
gevity ; and the parish swarms with children.
A Table of the Baptisms, Burials, and Marriages, from January 2,
1761, to December 25, 1780, in the Parish of Selborne.
BAPTISMS.
BURIALS.
MARRI-
AGES.
Males.
Females.
Total.
Males.
Females.
Total.
1761 .
8
10
.18
2
4
6
3
1762 .
7
8
15
10
14
24
6
1763 .
8
10
18
3
4
7
5
1764 .
11 1 9
20
10
8
18
6
1765 .
12
6
18
9
7
16
6
1766 .
9 13
22
10
6
16
4
1767 .
14 5
19
6
5
11
2
1768 .
7 6
13
2
5
7
6
1769 .
9 1 14
23
6
5
11
2
1770 .
10 13
23
4
7
11
3
1771 .
10 | 6
16
3
4
7
4
1772 .
11 j 10
21
6
10
16
3
1773 .
ft
5
13
7
5
12
3
1774 .
6 ! 13
19
2
8
10
1
1775 .
20
7
27
13
8
21
6
1776 .
11
10
21
4
6
10
6
1777 .
8
13
21
7
3
10
4
1778 .
7
13
20
3
4
7
5
1779 .
14
8
22
5
6
11
5
1780 ".
8
9
17
11
4
15
3
During this period of twenty years, the births of males exceeded
those of females 10. The burials of each sex were equal. And the
births exceeded the deaths 140. — G. W.
1 Since the passage above was written, 1 am nappy in oeing able to
say that the spinning employment is a little revived, to the no small
comfort of the industrious housewife. — Gr. W.
OF SELBOENE.
17
APPROACH TO THE VILLAGE.
LETTER VI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
HOULD I omit to describe with some
exactness the forest of Wolmer, of which
three-fifths perhaps lie in this parish, my
account of Selborne would be very imper-
fect ; as it is a district abounding with many
curious productions, both animal and vegetable ; and has
oftep afforded me much entertainment both as a sportsman
and as a naturalist.
The royal forest of Wolmer is a tract of land of about
seven miles in length, by two and a half in breadth, run-
ning nearly from north to south, and is abutted on, to begin
to the south, and so to proceed eastward, by the parishes of
Greatham, Lysse, Rogate, and Trotton, in the county of
Sussex ; by Bramshot, Hedleigh, and Kingsley. This
c
18 NATURAL HISTORY
royalty consists entirely of sand covered with heath and
fern ; but is somewhat diversified with hills and dales, with-
out having one standing tree in the whole extent.1 In the
bottoms, where the waters stagnate, are many bogs, which
formerly abounded with subterraneous trees ; though Dr.
Plot says positively,2 that there never were any fallen trees
hidden in the mosses of the southern counties. But he was
mistaken ; for I myself have seen cottages on the verge of
this wild district, whose timbers consisted of a black hard
wood, looking like oak, which the owners assured me they
procured from the bogs by probing the soil with spits, or
some such instruments ; but the peat is so much cut out,
and the moors have been so well examined, that none
has been found of late.3 Besides the oak, I have also been
1 At the present time nearly 1,500 acres are enclosed and planted,
chiefly with oak, larch, and Scotch fir ; and the large size to which many
of the firs have attained, proves how well adapted the soil is for that
kind of timber. Outside the enclosures seedling firs are springing up
rapidly ; and year by year as the wind scatters the seeds, the area of
the woodland increases, so that in time were the trees not felled or
burned, they would extend over the whole of the district comprised in
the "forest."
During the hot summer of 1864, a terrible conflagration occurred,
and was supposed to have been the work of incendiaries. 540 acres in
Longmoor, and 170 in Brimstone Wood were destroyed before the fire
burnt itself out. The amount of game destroyed, as may be supposed,
was commensurate with the destruction of its haunts. — ED.
2 See his History of Staffordshire.— Gr. W.
3 Old people have assured me that, on a winter's morning, they
have discovered these trees, in the bogs, by the hoar frost, which lay
longer over the space where they were concealed than on the surround-
ing morass. Nor does this seem to be a fanciful notion, but consistent
with true philosophy. Dr. Hales saith, " That the warmth of the
earth, at some depth under ground, has an influence in promoting a
thaw, as well as the change of the weather from a freezing to a thawing
state, is manifest from this observation, viz. Nov. 29, 1731, a little
snow having fallen in the night, it was, by eleven the next morning,
mostly melted away on the surface of the earth, except in several
places in Bushy Park, where there were drains dug and covered with
earth, on which the snow continued to lie, whether those drains were
full of water or dry ; as also where elm-pipes lay under ground ; a plain
proof this, that those drains intercepted the warmth of the earth from
ascending from greater depths below them : for the snow lav where the
OF SELBORNE.
19
shown pieces of fossil wood of a paler colour, and softer
nature, which the inhabitants called fir : but upon a nice
examination, and trial by fire, I could discover nothing
PAKTRIDGE.
resinous in them ; and therefore rather suppose that they
were parts of a willow or alder, or some such aquatic
tree.1
drain had more than four feet depth of earth over it. It continued
also to lie on thatch, tiles, and the tops of walls." See Hole's Hcema-
statics, p. 360. — Quere, Might not such observations be reduced to
domestic use, by promoting the discovery of old obliterated drains and
wells about houses ; and, in Roman stations and camps, lead to the
finding of pavements, baths, and graves, and other hidden relics of
curious antiquity ? — G. W
See also the letter to Daines Barrington, numbered LXI. ; in which
the effects of the short but intense frost of 1768 are described. — ED.
1 A more recent instance of the occurrence of bog-oak is recorded
in Letter LIX. to Daines Barrington : and probably the stock is by no
means yet exhausted. In addition to the oak, fir and birch are also
found. They are in various stages of carbonization, dependent on their
position, or, in other words, on the length of time during which they
have been subjected to the action of moisture and pressure. Above
the peat is a layer of sand of eighteen inches or two feet in thickness.
On the top of this rests a thick layer of turf ; consisting of the blended
roots of many generations of heath and other plants, and approaching,
in its lower part, to the character of the genuine bog. It is from this
compact layer that the majority of the larger trunks are obtained.
—ED.
20
NATURAL HISTORY
This lonely domain is a very agreeable haunt for many
sorts of wild fowls, which not only frequent it in the winter,
but breed there in the summer ; such as lapwings, snipes,
wild-ducks, and, as I have discovered within these few
years, teals. Partridges in vast plenty are bred in good
seasons on the verge of this forest, into which they love to
make excursions : and in particular, in the dry summers of
1740 and 1741, and some years after, they swarmed to such
BLACK GROUSE.
a degree, that parties of unreasonable sportsmen killed
twenty and sometimes thirty brace in a day.
But there was a nobler species of game in this forest,
now extinct, which I have heard old people say abounded
much before shooting flying became so common, and that
was the heath-cock, or black game. When I was a little
boy I recollect one coming now and then to my father's
table. The last pack remembered, was killed about thirty-five
years ago ; and within these ten years one solitary gray hen
was sprung by some beagles in beating for a hare. The
sportsman cried out, " A hen pheasant ;" but a gentleman
OF SELBORNE. 21
present, who had often seen black game in the north of
England, assured me that it was a gray hen.1
Nor does the loss of our black game prove the only gap
in the Fauna Selborniensis ; for another beautiful link in
the chain of beings is wanting, I mean the red deer, which
toward the beginning of this century amounted to about
five hundred head, and made a stately appearance. There
is an old keeper, now alive, named Adams, whose great
1 This fine game-bird, although it became extinct in Gilbert
White's day, was reintroduced after the planting of the wood, by Sir
Charles Taylor, then ranger of the forest, and for some time throve
exceedingly well. The parent stock of the present race came from
Cumberland, and in 1872 an old man who had brought the birds to
Wolmer was still living in the neighbouring village of Liphook. A
good sportsman and naturalist, Capt. Feilden, late of the 4th Regt.,
who visited Wolmer in 1872, expressly with the intention of noting the
changes which had taken place there since White's day, reported of the
black game as follows : " That the ground is well adapted for black
game is evident ; but I think the disproportion between the sexes
which now exists will, unless remedied, lead once more, and that ere long,
to the destruction of the species on Wolmer. There must be as many
as forty to fifty blackcocks on the ground, and I certainly have not
seen above six or seven grey hens. If this polygamous species is to
be kept up, the proportion of sexes ought to be reversed ; as it now is,
the hens are worried and driven off the ground by the importunities of
a crowd of suitors, and the result is that for several years past the
warders have not come across a nest or brood on the Government lands.
I am aware that in some parts of Scotland, where black game abound,
the old cocks are justly looked upon as detrimental to the general
interest, and are killed off as vermin at any season of the year. If
this were done at Wolmer, and a fair proportion produced between the
sexes, we might hope to retain this noble game-bird as a denizen of
Wolraer Forest for years to come." The species occurs sparingly upon
the moorlands and heaths of many of the southern counties of England,
and is reported as nesting occasionally in Cornwall, Devon, Somerset,
Dorset, Hants, Sussex and Surrey. Its chief haunts, however, lie more
to the north, upon the lower slopes of heathy and mountainous tracts,
which are covered with a natural growth of willow, birch, and alder, and
intersected by morasses. It subsists on a variety of food according to
season, such as insects, wild berries, and the seeds of various rushes and
other plants, but chiefly on the young and tender shoots of the heath, and
in winter, when these are no longer procurable, upon the buds and tops of
the birch and alder, and the embryo shoots of the different firs. These
they can well obtain, since they readily perch on trees, and always
roost at night on a horizontal bough like pheasants. — ED.
22 NATURAL HISTORY
grandfather (mentioned in a perambulation taken in 1635),
grandfather, father, and self, enjoyed the head keepership
of Wolmer Forest in succession for more than a hundred
years. This person assures me, that his father has often
told him that Queen Anne, as she was journeying on the
Portsmouth road, did not think the forest of Wolmer
beneath her royal regard. For she came out of the great
road at Lippock, which is just by, and reposing herself on a
bank smoothed for that purpose, lying about half a mile
to the east of Wolmer-pond, and still called Queen's bank,
saw with great complacency and satisfaction the whole herd
of red deer brought by the keepers along the vale before
her, consisting then of about five hundred head. A sight
this, worthy the attention of the greatest sovereign ! But
he farther adds that, by means of the Waltham blacks, or,
to use his own expression, as soon as they began blacking,
they were reduced to about fifty head, and so continued
decreasing till the time of the late Duke of Cumberland.
It is now more than thirty years ago that his highness sent
down a huntsman, and six yeomen-prickers, in scarlet jackets
laced with gold, attended by the staghounds; ordering
them to take every deer in this forest alive, and to convey
them in carts to Windsor. In the course of the summer
they caught every stag, some of which showed extraordinary
diversion ; but, in the following winter, when the hinds
were also carried off, such fine chases were exhibited as
served the country people for matter of talk and wonder
for years afterwards. I saw myself one of the yeomen-
prickers single out a stag from the herd, and must confess
that it was the most curious feat of activity I ever beheld,
superior to any thing in Mr. Astley's riding-school. The
exertions made by the horse and deer much exceeded all my
expectations ; though the former greatly excelled the latter
in speed. When the devoted deer was separated from his
companions, they gave him, by their watches, law, as they
called it, for twenty minutes ; when, sounding their horns,
the stop- dogs were permitted to pursue, and a most gallant
scene ensued.
OF SfilBOUNE. 23
LETTER VII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
HOUGH large herds of deer do much harm
to the neighbourhood, yet the injury to the
morals of the people is of more moment
than the loss of their crops. The temptation
is irresistible; for most men are sportsmen
by constitution, and there is such an inherent spirit for
hunting in human nature, as scarce any inhibitions can
restrain. Hence, towards the beginning of this century,
all this country was wild about deer-stealing. Unless he
was a hunter, as they affected to call themselves, no young
person was allowed to be possessed of manhood or gallantry.
The Waltham blacks at length committed such enormities,
that government was forced to interfere with that severe
and sanguinary act called the black act,1 which now com-
prehends more felonies than any law that ever was framed
before. And, therefore, a late Bishop of Winchester, when
urged to restock Walthain-chase/ refused, from a motive
worthy of a prelate, replying that ' ' It had done mischief
enough already/'
Our old race of deer-stealers are hardly extinct yet : it
was but a little while ago that, over their ale, they used to
recount the exploits of their youth ; such as watching the
pregnant hind to her lair, and, when the calf was dropped,
paring its feet with a penknife to the quick to prevent its
escape, till it was large and fat enough to be killed; the
shooting at one of their neighbours with a bullet in a turnip-
field by moonshine, mistaking him for a deer; and the losing
a dog in the following extraordinary manner : — Some fellows
1 Statute 9 Geo. I. c- 22.
2 This chase remains unstocked to this day: the Bishop was Dr.
Hoadiey.— G. W
24 NATURAL HISTORY
suspecting that a calf new-fallen was deposited in a certain
spot of thick fern, went with a lurcher to surprise it, when
the parent-hind rushed out of the brake, and, taking a vast
spring with all her feet close together, pitched upon the
neck of the dog, and broke it short in two.
Another temptation to idleness and sporting was a num-
ber of rabbits, which possessed all the hillocks and dry
places ; but these being inconvenient to the huntsmen, on
account of their burrows, when they came to take away the
deer, they permitted the country people to destroy them all.
Such forests and wastes, when the allurements to irregu-
larities are removed, are of considerable service to neigh-
bourhoods that verge upon them, by furnishing them with
peat and turf for their firing, with fuel for the burning their
lime, and with ashes for their grasses, and by maintaining
their geese and their stock of young cattle at little or no
expense.
The manor farm of the parish of Greatham has an ad-
mitted claim, I see (by an old record taken from the Tower
of London) , of turning all live stock on the forest, at proper
seasons, bidentibus exceptis.1 The reason, I presume, why
1 For this privilege the owner of that estate used to pay to the king
annually seven bushels of oats. — G. W.
OF SELSORNE. 25
sheep are excluded is because, being such close grazers,
they would pick out all the finest grasses, and hinder the
deer from thriving.1
Though (by statute 4 and 5 W. and Mary, c. 23), "to
burn on any waste, between Candlemas and Midsummer,
any grig, ling, heath and furze, goss or fern, is punishable
with whipping and confinement in the house of correction ;"
yet in this forest, about March or April, according to the
dryness of the season, such vast heath-fires are lighted up,
that they often get to a masterless head, and, catching the
hedges, have sometimes been communicated to the under-
woods, woods, and coppices, where great damage has
ensued.2 The plea for these burnings is, that when the old
coat of heath, &c. is consumed, young will sprout up, and
afford much tender browze for cattle : but where there is
large old furze, the fire, following the roots, consumes the
very ground ; so that for hundreds of acres nothing is to be
seen but smother and desolation, the whole circuit round
looking like the cinders of a volcano ; and, the soil being
quite exhausted, no traces of vegetation are to be found for
years. These conflagrations, as they take place usually with
a north-east or east wind, much annoy this village with
1 In the Holt, where a full stock of fallow-deer has been kept up till
lately, no sheep are admitted to this day. — G. W.
Sheep obtain the first pair of central permanent incisors when about
fourteen months old, and are then occasionally referred to by the term
bidentes. As remarked by Mr. Yarrell, it is singular that sheep with a
single row of incisor teeth pressing against a cartilaginous pad, should
be able to bite closer than a horse with a well matched double row of
teeth ; but it is a well known fact that a horse would be starved on
downs where sheep thrive. — ED.
2 In Scotland where the extensive burnings of heath are common, the
prohibited months have reference to the preservation of the eggs and
young of grouse and other game, as little other inconvenience is apt to
ensue when no woods are in the vicinity.
The Rev. J. Mitford has observed that the description of the con-
flagration arising from the heath-fires here mentioned reminds the scholar
of the stubble -burning described in Virgil's Georgics, i. 84, and the
commentary on the passage, by the elegant and learned Mr. Holdsworth,
p. 52. Compare Virgilii JEn. u. 304, Ovid. Epist. xv. 9, and Sil. Ital.
vii. 365. — ED.
26 NATURAL HISTORY
their smoke, and often alarm the country ; and once in par-
ticular, I remember that a gentleman, who lives beyond
Andover, coming to my house, when he got on the downs
between that town and Winchester, at twenty-five miles
distance, was surprised much with smoke and a hot smell of
fire, and concluded that Alresford was in flames ; but when
he came to that town, he then had apprehensions for the
next village, and so on to the end of his journey.
On two of the most conspicuous eminences of this forest
stand two arbours or bowers, made of the boughs of oaks ;
the one called Waldon-lodge, the other Brimstone-lodge :
these the keepers renew annually on the feast of St. Bar-
nabas, taking the old materials for a perquisite. The farm
called Blackmoor, in this parish, is obliged to find the posts
and brushwood for the former ; while the farms at Greatham,
in rotation, furnish for the latter, and are all enjoined to
cut and deliver the materials at the spot. This custom I
mention, because I look upon it to be of very remote
antiquity.
LETTEE VIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
the verge of the forest, as it is now circum-
scribed, are three considerable lakes, two in
Oakhanger, of which I have nothing parti-
cular to say; and one called Bin's or Bean's
Pond, which is worthy the attention of a
naturalist or a sportsman. For, being crowded at the upper
end with willows, and with the Oarex cespitosa? it affords
such a safe and pleasing shelter to wild ducks, teals, snipes,
&c. that they breed there. In the winter this covert is also
1 1 mean that sort which, rising into tall hassocks, is called by the
foresters torrets — a corruption, I suppose, of turrets. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 27
frequented by foxes, and sometimes by pheasants ; and the
bogs produce many curious plants.1 [For which, consult
Letter XLI. to Mr. Barrington.]
By a perambulation of Wolmer Forest and The Holt,
made in 1635, and in the eleventh year of Charles the First
(which now lies before me) , it appears that the limits of the
former are much circumscribed. For, to say nothing of the
farther side, with which I am not so well acquainted, the
bounds on this side, in old times, came into Binswood ; and
extended to the ditch of Ward le ham Park, in which stands
the curious mount called King John's Hill, and Lodge Hill ;
and to the verge of Hartley Mauduit, called Mauduit-hatch ;
comprehending also Short-heath, Oakhanger, and Oak-
woods ; a large district, now private property, though once
belonging to the royal domain.2
It is remarkable that the term purlieu is never once ?
mentioned in this long roll of parchment. It contains, c i
besides the perambulation, a rough estimate of the value
of the timbers, which were considerable, growing at that
time in the district of The Holt;3 and enumerates the
officers, superior and inferior, of those joint forests, for
the time being, and their ostensible fees and perquisites.
In those days, as at present, there were hardly any trees
in Wolmer Forest.
Within the present limits of the forest are three con-
siderable lakes, Hogmer, Cranmer, and Wolmer;4 all of
1 This pond has long since been drained, and cattle now graze in its
bed. The covert in which wild ducks and foxes formerly abounded has
almost entirely disappeared. — ED.
2 In the beginning of the summer (1787), the royal forests of Wolmer
and Holt were measured by persons sent down by government. — Gr. W.
Wolmer, with but two enclosures within its precincts, extended over
5,949 acres. The royal forest of The Holt, with its enclosures, was
then found to comprehend 2,744 acres.— ED.
3 At the date of the survey referred to in the preceding note, the
timber of The Holt was valued at £61,100. — ED.
4 The name Wolmer is doubtless a corruption of Wolf-mere, or Wolve-
mere : and it is not a little remarkable that the three great meres of
that district — Hogmer, Cranmer, and Wolmer — were named after wild
animals, which are all now extinct in Britain, namely, the hog, or wild
boar, the crane, and the wolf. — ED.
28
NATURAL HISTORY
n .
»
^
-^
which, are stocked with carp, tench, eels, and perch: but
the fish do not thrive well, because the water is hungry,
and the bottoms are a naked sand.
A circumstance respecting these ponds, though by no
means peculiar to them, I cannot pass over in silence ; and
that is, that instinct by which in summer all the kine,
whether oxen, cows, calves, or heifers, retire constantly
^° ^ne water during the hotter hours; where, being more
exempt from flies, and inhaling the coolness of that element,
some belly deep, and some only to mid-leg, they ruminate
and solace themselves from about ten in the morning till
four in the afternoon, and then return to their feeding.
During this great proportion of the day they drop much
dung, in which insects nestle ; and so supply food for the
fish, which would be poorly subsisted but from this con-
tingency. Thus Nature, who is a great economist, converts
the recreation of one animal to the support of another !
Thomson, who was a nice observer of natural occurrences,
did not let this pleasing circumstance escape him. He
says, in his " Summer,"
" A various group the herds and flocks compose .
— on the grassy bank
Some ruminating lie ; while others stand
Half in the flood, and often bending, sip
The circling surface. '
Wolmer-pond, so called, I suppose, for eminence sake, is a
vast lake for this part of the world, containing, in its whole
circumference, 2,646 yards, or very near a mile and a half.
The length of the north-west and opposite side is about
704 yards, and the breadth of the south-west end about
456 yards. This measurement, which I caused to be made
with good exactness, gives an area of about sixty-six acres,
exclusive of a large irregular arm at the north-east corner,
which we did not take into the reckoning.
On the face of this expanse of waters, and perfectly
secure from fowlers, lie all day long, in the winter season,
vast flocks of ducks, teals, and widgeons, of various denomi-
nations ; where they preen and solace and rest themselves,
till towards sunset, when they issue forth in little parties
OF SELBOHNE.
29
(for in their natural state they are all birds of the night)
to feed in the brooks and meadows ; returning again with
the dawn of the morning. Had this lake an arm or two
more, and were it planted round with thick covert (for now
it is perfectly naked), it might make a valuable decoy.1
Yet neither its extent, nor the clearness of its water, nor
the resort of various and curious fowls, nor its picturesque
groups of cattle, can render this mere so remarkable as the
great quantity of coins that were found in its bed about
forty years ago. But as such discoveries more properly
belong to the antiquities of this place, I shall suppress all
particulars for the present, till I enter professedly on my
series of Letters respecting the more remote history of this
village and district.
LETTER IX.
of years.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
Y way of supplement, I shall trouble you once
more on this subject, to inform you that
Wolmer, with her sister forest Ayles Holt,
alias Alice Holt,2 as it is called in old records,
is held by grant from the crown for a term
1 The broad expanse of Wolmer Great Pond still affords a safe retreat
to flocks of wild-fowl during the winter season ; and wild-ducks and
teal still breed in the forest ; the ducks in the heath, at long distances
from the swamp ; the teal nearer to the water. But the numbers of
both these species are yearly decreasing. — ED.
2 In Rot. Inquisit. de statu forest, in Scaccar. 36 Ed. III. it is called
Aisholt. In the same, " Tit. Woolmer & Aisholt Hantisc. Dominus Rex
habit unam capellam in haia sua de Kingesle." " Haia, sepes, sepimentum,
parcus : a Gall, haie and haye" Spelman's Glossary. Several additional
documents relating to the earlier history of the forests, both that of
"Wolmer and The Holt, are given in a note to Letter X. of the Autiqui
ties.— G. W.
30 NATURAL HISTORY
The grantees that the author remembers are Brigadier-
General Emanuel Scroop Howe, and his lady, Ruperta, who
'„ was a natural daughter of Prince Rupert by Margaret
Hughs ; a Mr. Mordaunt, of the Peterborough family, who
married a dowager Lady Pembroke ; Henry Bilson Legge
and lady; and now Lord Stawel, their son.1
The lady of General Howe lived to an advanced age, long
surviving her husband ; and, at her death, left behind her
many curious pieces of mechanism of her father's con-
structing, who was a distinguished mechanic and artist/
as well as warrior ; and among the rest, a very complicated
clock, lately in possession of Mr. Elmer, the celebrated
game-painter at Farnham, in the county of Surrey.
Though these two forests are only parted by a narrow
range of enclosures, yet no two soils can be more different :
for The Holt consists of a strong loam, of a miry nature,
carrying a good turf, and abounding with oaks that grow
to be large timber ; while Wolmer is nothing but a hungry,
sandy, barren waste.
The former, being all in the parish of Binsted, is about
two miles in extent from north to south, and near as much
from east to west ; and contains within it many woodlands
and lawns, and the great lodge where the grantees reside ;
and a smaller lodge called Goose Green ; and is abutted on
by the parishes of Kingsley, Frinsham, Farnham and
Bentley ; all of which have right of common.
One thing is remarkable; that, though The Holt has
been of old well stocked with fallow-deer, unrestrained by
any pales or fences more than a common hedge, yet they
were never seen within the limits of Wolmer ; nor were the
1 On the expiration of the grant to Lord Stawel, the Commissioners
of Woods and Forests resumed possession of The Holt. All the lands
held by him, and two-thirds of the former open forest, were subsequently
enclosed and planted. — ED.
2 This prince was the inventor of mezzotinto. — G. W. It would
perhaps be more correct to say that he was the introducer only of this
art into England. The invention it seems is due to Ludwig von Siegen,
who about 1654 communicated the secret to Prince Rupert (c/. Wai-
pole's " Anecdotes of Painters and Engravers," Bonn's edition, vol. iii.
p. 393). — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 31
red deer of Wolmer ever known to haunt the thickets or
glades of The Holt.1
At present the deer of The Holt are much thinned and
TALLOW DEER.
reduced by the night-hunters, who perpetually harass them
in spite of the efforts of numerous keepers, and the severe
penalties that have been put in force against them as often
1 Mr. Bennett lias pointed out that there could scarcely be two situ-
ations more dissimilar than The Holt and Wolmer Forest. The Holt ^
is on the gault, and has all the richness of meadow and nobleness of oak K^,
wood that distinguish that formation. It consequently offered to the
fallow deer, while they remained on it, plentiful grazing, abundance of p
browzing, and open and sheltered glades ; advantages suited to the
habits of that half domesticated race, introduced into this country by
man, and still requiring at his hands care and protection. Wolmer
Forest, on the lean and hungry sand, scarcely affords any grass, and has
no high covert ; and the red deer attached to it would have been limited
for their provender almost exclusively to the lichens, the heath tops,
and the twigs of the very few stunted bushes that occur here and there
on its surface : retirement could only have been obtained for them by
plunging into the unfrequented hollows interposed between its ridges.
The more tender and exotic deer was placed, and it might have seemed
almost naturally, in the richer and more sheltered forest of The Holt ;
the hardier and native race subsisted on the coarse fare of the dreary
and cheerless waste of Wolmer. — ED.
82 NATURAL HISTORY
^^ as they have been detected, and rendered liable to the lash
' of the law. Neither fines nor imprisonments ca^ deter
them : so impossible is it to extinguish the spirit of sporting,
which seems to be inherent in human nature.
General Howe turned out some German wild boars and
sows in his forests, to the great terror of the neighbour-
hood ; and, at one time, a wild bull or buffalo : but the
country rose upon them and destroyed them.1
A very large fall of timber, consisting of about 1,000
oaks, has been cut this spring (viz. 1784) in The Holt
forest ; one-fifth of which, it is said, belongs to the grantee,
Lord Stawel. He lays claim also to the lop and top : but
the poor of the parishes of Binstead and Frinsham, Bentley
and Kingsley, assert that it belongs to them ; and, assembling
in a riotous manner, have actually taken it all away. One
man, who keeps a team, has carried home for his share
forty sacks of wood. Forty-five of these people his lord-
ship has served with actions.2 These ~trees, which were
very sound, and in high perfection, were winter-cut, viz. in
February and March, before the bark would run.
In old times The Holt was estimated to be eighteen
miles, computed measure, from water-carriage, viz. from
the town of Chertsey, on the Thames ; but now it is not
half that distance, since the Wey is made navigable up to
the town of Godalming, in the county of Surrey.3
1 Charles the First also turned out in the New Forest German boars
and sows, which bred and increased. An engraving of one will be found
in Gilpin's "Forest Scenery," vol. ii. p. 118. — ED.
2 Mr. Bennett ascertained that the defendants in these actions, though
they made a show of resistance, suffered judgment to go by default. The
question of right had, in fact, been tried in 1741, and determined against
the claimants. Yet notwithstanding this, so soon after as 1788, on the
occasion of another fall of timber in The Holt, the people of Frinsham
again assembled and carried off openly upwards of 6,000 faggots. So
difficult is it to convince where interest opposes. — ED.
3 The formation of the Basingstoke Canal has again reduced the dis-
tance of The Holt from water-carriage ; and it is now accessible, either
at Odiham or at Bagman's Castle, within about seven miles. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 33
LETTER X.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
August 4, 1767.
T has been my misfortune never to have had
any neighbours whose studies have led them
towards the pursuit of natural knowledge ;
so that, for want of a companion to quicken
my industry and sharpen my attention, 1
have made but slender progress in a kind of information to
which I have been attached from my childhood.
As to swallows (Hirundines rusticce) being found in a
torpid state during the winter in the Isle of Wight, or any
part of this country, I never heard any such account worth
attending to. But a clergyman, of an inquisitive turn,
assures me, that when he was a great boy, some workmen,
in pulling down the battlements of a church tower early in
the spring, found two or three swifts (Hirundines apodes l)
among the rubbish, which were, at first appearance, dead ;
but, on being carried toward the fire, revived. He told me
that, out of his great care to preserve them, hc% put them in
a paper bag, and hung them by the kitchen fire, where they
were suffocated.
Another intelligent person has informed me that, while
he was a schoolboy at Brighthelmstone, in Sussex, a great
fragment of the chalk-cliff fell down one stormy winter on
the beach, and that many people found swallows among the
rubbish ; but, on my questioning him whether he saw any
of those birds himself, to my no small disappointment, he
answered me in the negative, but that others assured him
they did.
Young broods of swallows began to appear this year on
July the eleventh, and young martins (Hirundines urbicce)
1 Cypselus apus of modern ornithologists. — ED.
D
34 NATURAL HISTORY
were then fledged in their nests. Both species will breed
again once ; for I see by my Fauna of last year, that broods
came forth so late as September the eighteenth. Are not
these late hatchings more in favour of hiding than migra-
tion ? Nay, some young martins remained in their nests
last year so late as September the twenty-ninth ; and yet
they totally disappeared with us by the fifth of October.
How strange is it that the swift, which seems to live
exactly the same life as the swallow and house-martin, should
leave us before the middle of August invariably ! L while the
latter stay often to the middle of October ; and once I saw
numbers of house-martins on the seventh of November.
The martins and redwing fieldfares were flying in sight
together — an uncommon assemblage of winter birds ! 2
A little yellow bird (it is either a species of the Alauda
trivialis, or rather perhaps of the Motacilla trochilus) still
continues to make a sibilous shivering noise in the top of
tall woods.3
The Stoparola, of Ray (for which we have as yet no name
in these parts) is called, in your Zoology, the flycatcher.4
There is one circumstance characteristic of this bird, which
seems to have escaped observation, and that is, it takes its
stand on the top of some stake or post, from whence it
springs forth on its prey, catching a fly in the air, and hardly
ever touching* the ground, but returning still to the same
stand for many times together.
1 In quoting the above remark, under the head of Swift, in the second
volume of his "British Zoology," 1768, p. 246, Pennant adds : " For these,
and several other observations, we owe our acknowledgments to the
Reverend Mr. White, of Selborne, Hampshire." — ED.
2 An uncommon assemblage for the time of year, no doubt, though it
would not have been so in the Spring ; for at that season redwings and
fieldfares frequently stay with us for a month after the swallows and
martins have arrived. — ED.
3 By Alauda trivialis White intended the grasshopper warbler, as
will be seen by referring to his list of summer birds, in the 16th Letter
to Mr. Pennant. His Motacilla trochilus was the willow wren ; but the
" little yellow bird," which he compared with these, was no doubt the
wood wren, Ph. sibilatrix, of modern naturalists. — ED.
4 The spotted flycatcher, Muscicapa grisola, of modern naturalists.
—ED.
OF SELBORNE. 35
1 perceive there are more than one species of the Mota-
villa trochilus: Mr. Derham supposes, in Ray's " Philosophical
Letters/' that he has discovered three.1 In these there is
again an instance of some very common birds that have as
yet no English name.
Mr. Stillingfleet makes a question whether the blackcap
(Motacilla atricapilla) be a bird of passage or not; I think
there is no doubt of it, for in April, in the first fine weather,
they come trooping all at once into these parts, but are
never seen in the winter.2 They are delicate songsters.3
Numbers of snipes breed every summer in some moory
ground on the verge of this parish. It is very amusing to
see the cock bird on wing at that time, and to hear his pip-
ing and humming notes.4
I have had no opportunity yet of procuring any of those
1 Three are now well recognized, namely — the willow wren, the wood
wren, and the chiff-chaff. — ED.
2 It is now well known that the blackcap, as White surmised, migrates
southwards at the approach of the cold weather, and spends the winter
in Palestine, Egypt, Nubia, Abyssinia, and other parts of Africa, on the
west coast, as well as on the east. Many even spend the winter in Italy,.
Greece, and some of the islands of the Mediterranean. — ED.
3 For a description of the song of the blackcap see the letter to
Mr. Pennant, numbered XL. This description was copied by Pennant,
in the third edition of his "British Zoology," vol. i. p. 375. — ED.
4 Amongst the many rural sounds which greet the ear of the vagrant
naturalist in spring, none is more remarkable than that produced by the
common snipe in pairing time. This peculiar sound, which is never
heard except from a bird on the wing, has been variously termed " hum-
ming," " drumming," " neighing," and " bleating," according to the
fancy of the auditor ; and nothing has puzzled naturalists more, per-
haps, than to discover how this noise is produced.
Among German ornithologists especially, this has been a favourite
theme for discussion, and various have been the opinions expressed by
eminent observers on the subject. Some, like Bechstein, have main-
tained that the sound is emitted through the bill ; others, like Nau-
mann, considered it to result from a vibratory movement of the wings :
whilst the latest and most remarkable theory, that of Herr Meves, is
that it is produced by the outer tail feather on each side as it is drawn
rapidly through the air in the bird's descent. In an article on this sub-
ject, contributed to the Field, 27th April, 1872, we examined the vari-
ous theories here referred to, and gave our reasons for believing that the
view expressed by Naumann is probably the right one. — ED.
36 NATURAL HISTORY
mice which I mentioned to you in town. The person that
brought me the last says they are plenty in harvest, at
which time I will take care to get more ; and will endeavour
to put the matter out of doubt, whether it be a nondescript
species or not.
I suspect much there may be two species of water-rats.
Kay says, and Linnaeus after him, that the water-rat is web-
footed behind. Now I have discovered a rat on the banks
of our little stream that is not web-footed, and yet is an
excellent swimmer and diver : it answers exactly to the
Mus amphibius of Linnaeus (see Syst. Nat.) , which he says,
f{ natat in fossis et urinatur." I should be glad to procure
one " plantis palmatis." Linnaeus seems to be in a puzzle
about his Mus amphibius, and to doubt whether it differs
from his Mus terrestris ; which, if it be, as he allows, the
" Mus agrestis capite grandi, brachyuros," of Ray, is widely
different from the water-rat, both in size, make, and
manner of life.1
As to the Falco, which I mentioned in town, I shall take
the liberty to send it down to you into Wales; presuming
on your candour, that you will excuse me if it should
appear as familiar to you as it is strange to me. Though
mutilated, qualem dices . . . antehac fuissey tales cum sint
reliquice I "
1 Willughby was the originator of the confusion alluded to, as
pointed out by Mr. Bennett in a note to this passage. He described
the water-rat as having its toes connected together by intervening
webs ; and his description was published by Ray in the " Synopsis
Quadrupedum." Linnaeus, believing that such authorities were to be
relied on, admitted into several editions of his " Fauna Suecica " a rat-
like animal, having its hinder feet webbed. Subsequently, however,
he referred to it as of doubtful existence, as being perhaps inaccurately
described, and as probably to be referred to his Mus terrestris. Wil-
lughby's error no doubt was occasioned by his having assumed from a
certain habit that a certain structure which he regarded as indicated by
it must necessarily be coexistent with it.
The Mus agrestis capite grandi, brachyuros, of Ray, is the short-
tailed fi^ld—ffiouse or vole, Arvicola agrestis, LINN. ; the water rat, or
rather water vole, being the Arv. amphibia, DESM. The hybernaculum,
1 or winter nest of the water vole, is described later by White in his
~ twenty-sixth letter to Pennant. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 37
It haunted a marshy piece of ground in quest of wild
ducks and snipes ; but, when it was shot, had just knocked
down a rook, which it was tearing in pieces. I cannot
make it answer to any of our English hawks ; neither could
I find any like it at the curious exhibition of stuffed birds
in Spring Gardens. I found it nailed up at the end of a
barn, which is the countryman's museum.1
The parish I live in is a very abrupt, uneven country, full
of hills and woods, and therefore full of birds.
LETTER XI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, September 9, 1767.
i T will not be without impatience that I shall
wait for your thoughts with regard to the
Falco. As to its weight, breadth, &c., I
wish I had set them down at the time : but
to the best of my remembrance, it weighed
two pounds and eight ounces, and measured, from wing to
wing, thirty-eight inches. Its cere and feet were yellow,
and the circle of its eyelids a bright yellow. As it had
been killed some days, and the eyes were sunk, I could
make no good observation on the colour of the pupils and
the irides.'2
The most unusual birds I ever observed in these parts
were a pair of hoopoes (Upupa) , which came several years
ago in the summer, and frequented an ornamented piece of
ground, which joins to my garden, for some weeks. They
used to march about in a stately manner, feeding in the
walks, many times in the day ; and seem disposed to breed
1 The species proved to be the Peregrine, Falco peregrinus of
naturalists. — ED.
2 The irides of all the true Falcons are brown. — ED.
38 NATURAL HISTORY
in my outlet; but were frighted and persecuted by idle
boys, who would never let them be at rest.1
Three gros-beaka (Loxia coccothraustes)'2 appeared some
years ago in my fields, in the winter ; one of which I shot :
THE HOOPOE.
since that, now and then, one is occasionally seen in the
same dead season.
1 The hoopoe is an irregular spring and autumn visitant to this
country. It has occasionally nested here, and would do so, no doubt,
more frequently if unmolested. Colonel Montagu states, in his
•' Ornithological Dictionary," that a pair of hoopoes began a nest in
Hampshire, but being disturbed forsook it, and went elsewhere ; and Dr.
Latham, in the Supplement to his " General Synopsis." has referred to
a young Hoopoe in nestling plumage, which was shot in this country in
May. A pair nested for several years in the grounds of Pennsylvania
Castle, Portland (c/. Garland, "Naturalist/' 1852, p. 82), and
according to Mr. Turner, of Sherborne, Dorsetshire, the nest has been
taken on three or four occasions by the school-boys from pollard
willows on the banks of the river at Lenthay. The birds were known
to the boys as " hoops." Mr. Jesse, in a note to this passage in his
edition of the present work, states that a pair of hoopoes bred for many
years in an old ash tree in the grounds of a lady in Sussex, near
Chichester. — ED.
2 Coccothraustes vulgaris of modern systematists.
OF SELBOENE.
39
A cross-bill (Loxia curvirostra) was killed last year in
this neighbourhood.1
Our streams, which are small, and rise only at the end o
the village, yield nothing but the bull's header miller's
thumb (Gobius fluviatilis capitatus) , the trout (Trutta
CROSSBILL.
fluviatilis), the eel (Anguilla) , the lampern (Lampetra
parva et fluviatilis), and the stickle-back (Pisciculus
aculeatus) .* d~*r*#» ^f • j — r-*— ^c-
We are twenty miles from the sea, and almost as many
1 In the fourth volume of the " Zoological Journal," and subsequently
in the second volume of his " History of British Birds," Mr. Yarrell
published an excellent account of the muscles by which the singular
beak and tongue of the cross-bill are made to serve the peculiar
purposes for which they are designed. — ED.
2 These names were derived from Ray's " Synopsis Avium et Piscium."
The more modern nomenclature, as adopted by Yarrell in his " History
of British Fishes," is as follows : — The river bull-head or miller's-thumb,
Coitus gobio; the trout, Salmo fario ; of eel three species are admitted
by Yarrell as indigenous to this country, the Sharp-nosed, Anguilla
acutirostris, the Broad-nosed, A. latirostris, and the Sing, ^4. mediorostris ;
but the first and third are now regarded as identical, whilst the second
is as much a marine as a fresh-water species ; the Lampern, Petromyzon
fluviatilis', and the Common Stickleback (there are several species),
Gasterosteus aculeatus. — ED.
40 NATURAL HISTORY
from a great river, and therefore see but little of seabirds.
As to wild fowls, we have a few teams of ducks bred in the
moors where the snipes breed ; and multitudes of widgeons
and teals in hard weather frequent our lakes in the forest.
Having some acquaintance with a tame brown owl, I find
that it casts up the fur of mice, and the feathers of birds, in
pellets, after the manner of hawks : when full, like a dog, it
hides what it cannot eat.
The young of the barn-owl are not easily raised, as they
want a constant supply of fresh mice : whereas the young of
the brown owl will eat indiscriminately all that is brought ;
snails, rats, kittens, puppies, magpies and any kind of
carrion or offal.
The house-martins have eggs still, and squab-young.
The last swift I observed was about the twenty-first of
August ; it was a straggler.
Red- starts, fly-catchers, white-throats and Reguli non
cristati, still appear ;x but I have seen no blackcaps lately.
I forgot to mention that I once saw, in Christ Church
College quadrangle in Oxford, on a very sunny warm
morning, a house-martin flying about, and settling on the
parapets, so late as the twentieth of November.
At present I know only two species of bats, the common
Vespertilio murinus1 and the Vespertilio auritus.2
I was much entertained last summer with a tame bat,
which would take flies out of a person's hand. If you gave
it any thing to eat, it brought its wings round before the
mouth, hovering and hiding its head in the manner of birds
1 By Reguli non cristati are intended the three species of " willow-
wrens," as they are generally called, and to which allusion has been
already made. — ED.
2 The common pipistrelle and the long- eared bat. In giving to the
former, however, the specific name murinus White fell into a mistake
which many others have since made. V. murinus being the common
bat of the Continent, it was assumed that the common bat of this country
must be the same species, and Pennant having once stated such to be
the case, every subsequent writer on bats copied the mistake. It was
left to the Rev. Leonard Jenyns to correct this long established error,
and he has done so most satisfactorily in a paper published in the 16th
vol. of the " Linnean Society's Transactions." — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 41
ol prey when they feed. The adroitness it showed in
shearing off the wings of the flies, which were always rejected,
was worthy of observation, and pleased me much. Insects
seemed to be most acceptable, though it did not refuse raw
flesh when offered : so that the notion, that bats go down
chimneys and gnaw men's bacon, seems no improbable
story. While I amused myself with this wonderful quadru-
ped, I saw it several times confute the vulgar opinion, that
"bats when down on a flat surface cannot get on the wing
again, by rising with great ease from the floor. It ran, I
observed, with more dispatch than I was aware of; but in
a most ridiculous and grotesque manner.
Bats drink on the wing, like swallows, by sipping the
surface, as they play over pools and streams. They love to
frequent waters, not only for the sake of drinking, but on
account of insects, which are found over them in the greatest
plenty. As I was going some years ago, pretty late, in a
boat from Richmond to Sunbury, on a warm summer's
evening, I think I saw myriads of bats between the two
places : the air swarmed with them all along the Thames,
so that hundreds were in sight at a time.
LETTER XII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
November 4, 1767.
;T gave me no small satisfaction to hear that
the Falco turned out an uncommon one.1 I
must confess I should have been better
pleased to have heard that I had sent you a
bird that you had never seen before ; but
that, I find, would be a difficult task.
1 This hawk proved to be the Falco peregrinus ; a variety. — G. W.
It differed from the ordinary type in having the under parts of the
42 NATURAL HISTORY
I have procured some of the mice mentioned in my for-
mer letter,1 a young one and a female with young, both of
which I have preserved in brandy, from the colour, shape,
size and manner of nesting, I make no doubt but that the
THE HARVKST MOUSE.
species is nondescript. They are much smaller, and more
slender, than the Mus domesticMs medius of Eay ; and have
^ i[^ more of the squirrel or dormouse colour : their belly is
white ; a straight line along their sides divides the shades
of their back and belly. They never enter into houses, are
carried into ricks and barns with the sheaves, abound in
j^-.'^o harvest, and build their nests amidst the straws of the corn
above the ground, and sometimes in thistles. They breed
as many as eight at a litter, in a little round nest composed
of the blades of grass or wheat.
One of these nests I procured this autumn, most artifi-
cially plaited, and composed of the blades of wheat, per-
fectly round, and about the size of a cricket-ball, with the
body of a dirty yellow colour, but with the usual black bars. See Pen-
nant, " Brit. Zool." 1768, p. 560. It was shot in the adjoining parish of
Faringdon. — ED.
1 Letter X. pp. 35, 36.
OF SELBORNE. 43
aperture so ingeniously closed, that there was no discover-
ing to what part it belonged. It was so compact and well
filled, that it would roll across the table without being dis-
composed, though it contained eight little mice that were
naked and blind. As this nest was perfectly full, how could
the dam come at her litter respectively so as to administer
a teat to each ? Perhaps she opens different places for that
purpose, adjusting them again when the business is over ;
but she could not possibly be contained herself in the ball
with the young, which moreover would be daily increasing
in bulk. This wonderful "procreant cradle/' an elegant
instance of the efforts of instinct, was found in a wheat-field
suspended in the head of a thistle.1
A gentleman, curious in birds, wrote me word that his
servant had shot one last January, in that severe weather,
which, he believed, would puzzle me. I called to see it this
summer, not knowing what to expect; but the moment I
took it in hand, I pronounced it the male Garrulus Bolie-
micus, or German silk- tail, from the five peculiar crimson
tags or points which it carries at the ends of five of the
short remiges. It cannot, I suppose, with any propriety,
be called an English bird • and yet I see, by Ray's Philoso-
phical Letters, that great flocks of them, feeding on haws,
appeared in this kingdom in the winter of 1685.2
The mention of haws puts me in mind that there is a total
failure of that wild fruit, so conducive to the support of
many of the winged nation. For the same severe weather,
late in the spring, which cut off all the produce of the more
tender and curious trees, destroyed also that of the more
hardy and common.
1 We are indebted to Gilbert White for the first published account of
this beautiful little animal as indigenous to this country, although it
appears to have been previously seen by Montagu in Wiltshire (cf
Trans. Lin. Soc. vol. vii. p. 274). White communicated his discovery
to Pennant, who published it in the second edition of his "British
Quadrupeds ; " and thence it has been copied, with but little addition,
by almost every writer on the subject of British mammalia. — ED.
2 The waxwing, or Bohemian chatterer, as it is often called (Ampclis
garrulus, Linna3us), may be regarded as an irregular winter visitant to
this country, occasionally appearing in large flocks. — ED.
44 NATURAL HISTORY
Some birds, haunting with the missel-thrushes, and feed-
ing on the berries of the yew-tree, which answered to the
description of the Merula torquata,1 or ring-ouzel, were
lately seen in this neighbourhood. I employed some people
to procure me a specimen, but without success.2
Query — Might not canary birds be naturalized to this
climate, provided their eggs were put, in the spring, into
the nest of some of their congeners, as goldfinches, green-
finches, &c. ? Before winter, perhaps, they might be hard-
ened, and able to shift for themselves.
About ten years ago, I used to spend some weeks yearly
at Sunbury, which is one of those pleasant villages lying on
the Thames, near Hampton Court. In the autumn, I could
not help being much amused with those myriads of the
swallow kind which assemble in those parts. But what
struck me most was, that from the time they began to con-
gregate, forsaking the chimneys and houses, they roosted
every night in the osier-beds of the aits of that river. Now
this resorting towards that element, at that season of the
year, seems to give some countenance to the northern opinion
(strange as it is) of their retiring under water. A Swedish
naturalist is so much persuaded of that fact, that he talks,
in his " Calendar of Flora," as familiarly of the swallow's
going under water in the beginning of September as he
would of his poultry going to roost a little before sunset.3
An observing gentleman in London writes me word, that
he saw a house-martin, on the twenty-third of last October,
flying in and out of its nest in the Borough. And I myself,
on the twenty-ninth of last October (as I was travelling
through Oxford) saw four or five swallows hovering round
and settling on the roof of the county hospital.
Now, is it likely that these poor little birds (which, per-
haps, had not been hatched but a few weeks) should, at that
late season of the year, and from so midland a county,
1 Turdus torquatus, Linnaeus. 2 See Letters XIII. and XX.
3 Stillingfleet's " Calendar of Flora," Swedish and English, made in
1755, and published in 1761. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 45
attempt a voyage to Goree or Senegal, almost as far as the
equator ?l
I acquiesce entirely in your opinion — that, though most
of the swallow kind may migrate, yet that some do stay
behind and bide with us during the winter.
As to the short- winged soft-billed birds, which come
trooping in such numbers in the spring, I am at a loss even
what to suspect about them. I watched them narrowly
this year, and saw them abound till about Michaelmas,
when they appeared no longer. Subsist they cannot openly
among us, and yet elude the eyes of the inquisitive ; and,
as to their hiding, no man pretends to have found any of
them in a torpid state in the winter. But with regard to
their migration, what difficulties attend that supposition !
that such feeble bad fliers (who the summer long never flit
but from hedge to hedge) , should be able to traverse vast seas
and continents, in order to enjoy milder seasons amidst the
regions of Africa ! 2
1 See Adanson's Voyage to Senegal. — G. W.
The late Dean of Manchester, the Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert, famished
an interesting note to this passage for Mr. Bennett's edition of this work,
to the effect that late broods of young swifts, as soon as they leave the
nest, are often obliged to migrate at once (see White's observations in
Letter LII. to the Hon. Daines Barrington); and that the various
species of hirundines remain in their nests till they are more completely
feathered than any other birds, so that when they come forth at last, they
are ready for flight. Whether the same individuals of a species, amongst
birds, ever cross the equator is a question upon which ornithologists are
not unanimously agreed. Certain it is, however, that the same species
is often found on both sides of the line, as in the case of the common
swallow, which, spending the summer in Europe, passes some portion of
the year also at the Cape of Good Hope. On this subject the reader
may be referred to an interesting article " On some new or little-
known points in the Economy of the Common Swallow," by Messrs.
Sharpe and Dresser, published in the " Proceedings of the Zoological
Society," 1870, p. 244. — ED.
2 Some further observations on this subject, tending to a solution of
the difficulties referred to, will be found in Letter XXXIII. to Pennant,
and Letter IX. to the Hon. Daines Barrington. — ED.
46
NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Jan. 22, 1768.
S in one of your former letters you expressed
the more satisfaction from my corre-
spondence on account of my living in the
most southerly county ; so now I may
return the compliment, and expect to have
my curiosity gratified by your living much more to the
north.
CHAFFINCH.
For many years past I have observed that towards
Christmas vast flocks of chaffinches have appeared in the
fields ; many more, I used to think, than could be hatched
in any one neighbourhood. But, when I came to observe
them more narrowly, I was amazed to find that they seemed
to me to be almost all hens. I communicated my suspicions
to some intelligent neighbours, who, after taking pains
about the matter, declared that they also thought them all
mostly females ; at least fifty to one. This extraordinary
occurrence brought to my mind the remark of Linnasus ;
OF SELBORNE. 47
that " before winter all their hen chaffinches migrate
through Holland into Italy." Now I want to know, from
some curious person in the north, whether there are any
large flocks of these finches with them in the winter, and of
which sex they mostly consist? For, from such intelli-
gence, one might be able to judge whether our female flocks
migrate from the other end of the island, or whether they
come over to us from the continent.1
We have, in the winter, vast flocks of the common
linnets ; more, I think, than can be bred in any one district.
These, I observe, when the spring advances, assemble on
some tree in the sunshine, and join all in a gentle sort of
chirping, as if they were about to break up their winter
quarters, and betake themselves to their proper summer
homes.2 It is well known, at least, that the swallows and
the fieldfares do congregate with a gentle twittering before
they make their respective departure.
You may depend on it that the bunting, Emberiza
miliaria, does not leave this county in the winter. In
January, 1767, I saw several dozen of them, in the midst of
a severe frost, among the bushes on the downs near An-
dover: in our woodland enclosed district it is a rare bird.3
Wagtails, both white and yellow,4 are with us all the
1 This separation of the sexes in winter has been noticed by other
observers, but it is not universally the rule, for in some parts of the
country many individuals of both sexes remain throughout the winter
and do not flock. — ED.
2 Linnets flock in September, and continue to congregate till March.
—ED.
3 Since this remark was penned by Gilbert White, another species
of bunting has been observed in his parish, namely, the cirl bunting,
Emberiza cirlus. Not only have we seen this bird there in autumn,
but Mr. Bell (the fortunate owner of Gilbert White's old house),
informs us that it has nested there to his knowledge on several occa-
sions, and successfully reared its young. — ED.
4 By the yellow wagtail, White here means the winter yellow wag-
tail, or, as it is generally called, the grey wagtail (M. boarula, Linn.)
It is a local resident, breeding regularly in Scotland and the north of
England, but is generally regarded in the south of England as a winter
visitant. It has, however, been found nesting in many of the southern
counties, as Sussex, Dorset, Gloucester, Devon and Cornwall. — ED.
48 NATURAL HISTORY
winter. Quails crowd to our southern coast, and are often
killed in numbers by people that go on purpose.
Mr. Stillingfleet, in his Tracts, says that, " if the wheat-
ear (OEnanthe)1 does not quit England, it certainly shifts
places ; for about harvest they are not to be found, where
WHEAT EAR.
there was before great plenty of them." This well accounts
for the vast quantities that are caught about that time on
the South Downs near Lewes, where they are esteemed a
delicacy. There have been shepherds, I have been credibly
1 Saxicola cenanthe (Linn.) The popular name " wheatear " appears to
have been originally local and confined to the South Downs. Elsewhere
it is called " fallow- chat " and " white -tail." Willughby, referring to
this bird, calls it " the fallow-smick, in Sussex the wheatear, because
the time of wheat-harvest they wax very fat." Many other derivations
of the name, however, have been suggested, amongst others the follow-
ing is perhaps as plausible as any. Those who arc acquainted with
the wheatear, know that the basal half of the tail is white, and that as
the bird moves, this white patch is very conspicuous. "Wheat" may
easily be a corruption of " whit" or " white," and as regards the "ear,"
if we affix the " e " instead of prefixing it, and insert a penultimate
letter, we have the substantive by which our Saxon forefathers would
have described that portion of the anatomy which is white. This view
receives some support from the spelling adopted by the earlier English
writers (cf. Chaucer's " Miller's Tale"), and Mr. Bennett has sug-
gested that " Hwitaers " may possibly have been its Saxon name. IP
France to this day the bird is called " cul-blanc." — ED.
OF SELtiORNE. 49
informed, that have made many pounds in a season by
catching them in traps. And though such multitudes are
taken, I never saw (and I am well acquainted with those
parts) above two or three at a time : for they are never
gregarious. They may perhaps migrate in general; and,
for that purpose, draw towards the coast of Sussex in
autumn; but that they do not all withdraw I am sure;
because I see a few stragglers in many counties, at all times
of the year, especially about warrens and stone quarries.1
I have no acquaintance, at present, among the gentlemen
of the navy ; but have written to a friend, who was a sea-
chaplain in the late war, desiring him to look into his
minutes, with respect to birds that settled on their rigging
during their voyage up or down the Channel. What Has-
selquist says on that subject is remarkable; there were
little short-winged birds frequently coming on board his
ship all the way from our Channel quite up to the Levant,
especially before squally weather.2
What you suggest, with regard to Spain, is highly
probable. The winters of Andalusia are so mild, that, in
all likelihood, the soft-billed birds that leave us at that
season may find insects sufficient to support them there.
Some young man, possessed of fortune, health, and
leisure, should make an autumnal voyage into that king-
dom; and should spend a year there, investigating the
natural history of that vast country. Mr. Willughby3
passed through that kingdom on such an errand ; but he
seems to have skirted along in a superficial manner and an
ill humour, being much disgusted at the rude dissolute
manners of the people.
I have no friend left now at Sunbury to apply to about
the swallows roosting on the aits of the Thames ; nor can I
1 On this subject the reader may be referred to Knox's " Ornitho-
logical Rambles in Sussex," p. 194 ; and Professor Newton's edition of
YarreU's " Hist. Brit. Birds," vol. i. pp. 350, 351. — ED.
2 This statement has been confirmed repeatedly by subsequent
observers. — ED.
3 See Ray's " Travels," p. 466. — G. W.
50 NATURAL HISTORY
hear any more about those birds which I suspected were
MerulcB torquatce.1
As to the small mice, I have farther to remark, that
though they hang their nests for breeding up amidst the
straws of the standing corn, above the ground, yet I find
that, in the winter, they burrow deep in the earth, and
make warm beds of grass; but their grand rendezvous
seems to be in corn-ricks, into which they are carried at
harvest. * A neighbour housed an oat-rick lately, under the
thatch of which were assembled near a hundred, most of
which were taken ; and some I saw. I measured them ;
and found that, from nose to tail, they were just two
inches and a quarter, and their tails just two inches long.2
Two of them, in a scale, weighed down just one copper
halfpenny, which is about the third of an ounce avoirdupois ;
so that I suppose they are the smallest quadrupeds in this
island. A full-grown Mus domesticus medius weighs, I
find, one ounce lumping weight, which is more than six
times as much as the mouse above ; and measures from
nose to rump four inches and a quarter, and the same in
its tail.
We have had a very severe frost and deep snow this
month. My thermometer was one day fourteen degrees
and a half below the freezing point, within doors. The
tender evergreens were injured pretty much. It was very
providential that the air was still, and the ground well
covered with snow, else vegetation in general must have
suffered prodigiously. There is reason to believe that some
days were more severe than any since the year 1739-40.1
1 See antea, p. 44.
2 It is perhaps not generally known that the tail of the harvest mouse
is prehensile, and is in consequence of great service to the little animal
when descending the wheat stalks amongst which its nest is usually
suspended. In "The Zoologist" for 1843, p. 289, will be found a
woodcut in illustration of this fact as observed by the Rev. Pemberton
Bartlett. — ED.
3 A full account of the effects of this short but intense frost will be
found in Letter LXI. to the Hon. Daines Barrington.
OF SELBORNE. 51
Pt_^<^-2'l 1^(— tf-y
LETTER XIV.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIEE.
SELBORNE, March 12, 1768.
;F some curious gentleman would procure the
head of a fallow-deer, and have it dissected,
he would find it furnished with two spiracula,
or breathing places, besides the nostrils • pro-
bably analogous tot he puncta lachrymalia in
the human head. When deer are thirsty they plunge their
noses, like some horses, very deep under water while in the
act of drinking, and continue them in that situation for a
considerable time; but, to obviate any inconveniejicy. they
can open two vents, one at the inner corner of each eye,
having a communication with the nose. Here seems to be
an extraordinary provision of nature worthy our attention ;
and which has not, that I know of, been noticed by any
naturalist. For it looks as if these creatures would not be
suffocated, though both their mouths and nostrils were
stopped. This curious formation of the head may be of
singular service to beasts of chase, by affording them free
respiration ; and no doubt these additional nostrils are
thrown open when they are hard run.1
1 In answer to this account, Mr. Pennant sent me the following curi-
ous and pertinent reply. " I was much surprised to find in the antelope
something analogous to what you mention as so remarkable in deer.
This animal also has a long slit beneath each eye, which can be opened
and shut at pleasure. On holding an orange to one, the creature made
'' as much use of those orifices as of his nostrils, applying them to the
fruit, and seeming to smell it through them." — Or. W.
Both White and Pennant, however, were here misled by appearances,
for it has since been shown by anatomical investigation, that there is no
communication between those cavities and the nostrils, they being rather
the site of a peculiar secretion. Dr. Jacob, in a paper " On the infra-
orbital cavities in deer and antelopes," published in the " Edinburgh
52 NATURAL HISTORY
Mr. Ray observed that, at Malta, the owners slit up the
nostrils of such asses as were hard worked ; for they, being
naturally straight or small, did not admit air sufficient to
serve them when they travelled, or laboured in that hot
climate. And we know that grooms, and gentlemen of the
turf, think large nostrils necessary, and a perfection, in
hunters and running horses. Oppian, the Greek poet, by
the following line, seems to have had some notion that stags
have four spiracula.
TerpaSvpoi pivtc, Triirvpes Trvoififfi liavXoi.
" Quadrifidae nares, quadruplices ad respirationem canales."
OPP. Cyn. lib. ii. 1. 181
Writers, copying from one another, make Aristotle say
that goats breathe at their ears ; whereas he asserts just the
contrary : — 3 'AAKjCxa/wy yap OUK .aAnO*] Asyst, (po^ufi/of ctvcnrvs'ii/
rocg oc.lytx.<; xocroc roc WTO,. " Alcmaeon does not advance
what is true, when he avers that goats breathe through
their ears/' — History of Animals, Book I. chap, xi.1
Philosophical Journal" for October, 1835, says: "The passage of air
through these cavities cannot take place, as they are perfectly im-
pervious towards the nostril ; but I have no doubt that the fact stated
[by White] is correct ; the air which escapes passing not through the
infra-orbital sacs, but through the lachrymal passages, which are very
large, consisting of two openings capable of admitting the end of a
crow's quill, the entrance to a tortuous canal, which conducts the tears
to the extremity of the nose. Introducing a pipe into the outlet of the
nasal duct, at the extremity of the nose, I can without difficulty force a
current of air or water through the nasal duct [Qw#re, lachrymal sinus. —
ED.] and it therefore appears reasonable to admit that the effect observed
[by White], arose from the animal forcing the air into the nostrils while
the nose and mouth were immersed in water." — ED.
1 It is possible that this idea may have originated in the possession by
the chamois of post-auditory sinuses ; the openings of which behind the
base of the ears may have been regarded as orifices for breathing, in the
same manner as a similar function was erroneously ascribed to the
suborbital sinuses. There is more reason in the supposition that the
ears communicate with the nose, than that the suborbital sinus has any
such communication ; since in all animals that have a tympanic cavity
opening upon the surface by an external passage, there is another conduit
termed the Eustachian tube, leading inwards from the tympanum to the
nose, the use of which is to regulate the pressure of the atmosphere
upon the membrana tympani, and to convey superfluous moisture to the
nose. — ED.
OF SELBORNE.
53
LETTER XV,
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, March 30, 1768.
OMB intelligent country people have a notion
that we have in these parts a species of the
genus mustelinum, besides the weasel, stoat,
ferret, and polecat; a little reddish beast,
not much bigger than a field mouse, but
much longer, which they call a " cane." This piece of intel-
ligence can be little depended on ; but farther inquiry may
be made.1
WEASEL.
A gentleman in this neighbourhood had two milk-white
rooks in one nest. A booby of a carter, finding them be-
fore they were able to fly, threw them down and destroyed
them, to the regret of the owner, who would have been
glad to have preserved such a curiosity in his rookery. I
saw the birds myself nailed against the end of a barn, and
1 Cane is a provincial name for the female of the common weasel,
which is usually one-fourth smaller than the male. — ED.
54 NATURAL HISTORY
was surprised to find that their bills, legs, feet, and claws
were milk-white.
A shepherd saw, as he thought, some white larks on a
down above my house this winter : were not these the snow-
flake, the Emberiza nivalis of the British Zoology ? No doubt
they were.
A few years ago I saw a cock bullfinch in a cage, which
had been caught in the fields after it was come to its full
colours. In about a year it began to look dingy; and,
blackening every succeeding year, it became coal-black at
the end of four. Its chief food was hempseed. Such
influence has food on the colour of animals ! The pied and
mottled colours of domesticated animals are supposed to be
owing to high, various, and unusual food.
I had remarked, for years, that the root of the cuckoo-
pint (Arum) was frequently scratched out of the dry banks
of hedges, and eaten in severe snowy weather. After obser-
ving with some exactness, myself, and getting others to do
the same, we found it was the thrush kind that searched it
out. The root of the Arum is remarkably warm and
pungent.
Our flocks of female chaffinches have not yet forsaken
us. The blackbirds and thrushes are very much thinned
down by that fierce weather in January.
In the middle of February I discovered, in my tall
hedges, a little bird that raised my curiosity ; it was of that
yellow-green colour that belongs to the Salicaria kind,1
and, I think, was soft-billed. It was no Parus ; and was
too long and too big for the golden-crowned wren, appear-
ing most like the largest willow-wren.2 It hung sometimes
with its back downwards, but never continuing one moment
in the same place. I shot at it, but it was so desultory that
I missed my aim.
1 By Salicaria, White evidently means the willow-wren group, and
not the reed warblers, to which the generic term Salicaria is often ap-
plied.— ED. '
2 It was probably the Chiff-chaff, although the date mentioned would
be an unusually early one at which to find this hardy little bird here. In
1872, the Chiff-chaff was seen at Torquay on the 2nd March, and at
Chudleigh and Taunton on the 9th of that month. — ED.
OF SELBORNE.
55
I wonder that the stone curlew (Charadrius oedicnemus1),
should be mentioned by the writers as a rare bird ; it
abounds in all the campaign parts of Hampshire and
Sussex, and breeds, I think, all the summer, having young
ones, I know, very late in the autumn. Already they begin
clamouring in the evening. They cannot, I think, with any
propriety, be classed, as they are by Mr. Ray, among birds
" circa aquas versantes ;" for with us, by day at least, they
haunt only the most dry, open, upland fields and sheep-
walks, far removed from water; what they may do in the
night I cannot say. Worms are their usual food, but they
also eat toads and frogs.2
I can show you some good specimens of my new mice.
Linnaeus perhaps would call the species Mus minimus.
LETTER XVI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, April 18, 1768.
I HE history of the stone curlew (Charadrius
oedicnemus) is as follows. It lays its eggs,
usually two, never more than three, on the
bare ground, without any nest, in the field ;
so that the countryman, in stirring his fal-
lows, often destroys them. The young run immediately
from the egg like partridges, &c. and are withdrawn to
some flinty field by the dam, where they skulk among the
stones,, which are their best security ; for their feathers are
so exactly of the colour of our grey spotted flints, that the
most exact observer, unless he catches the eye of the young
1 (Edicnemus crepitans, TEMM.
2 The stomachs of several stone curlews which we have examined
at different times, were filled chiefly with the remains of beetles, but in
one we found the remains of a long-tailed field mouse. — ED.
56 NATURAL HISTORY
bird, may be eluded. The eggs are short and round ; of a
dirty white, spotted with dark bloody blotches. Though I
might not be able, just when I pleased, to procure you a
bird, yet I could show you them almost any day ; and any
evening you may hear them round the village, for they
make a clamour which may be heard a mile. (Edicnemus is
a most apt and expressive name for them, since their legs
seem swollen like those of a gouty man.1 After harvest I
have shot them before the pointers in turnip -fields.
I make no doubt but there are three species of the willow
wrens ; two I know perfectly ; but have not been able yet
to procure the third." "No two birds can differ more in their
1 It is only the young of the year which have the upper part of the
tarsus so much swollen. The same thing is observable, but less
markedly, in the young of most other agallatorial birds. — ED.
2 Gilbert White clearly distinguishes three species of these little
birds ; and he seems to have had some idea of a fourth ; but on this
point there is a confusion in the entries in the Naturalist's Calendar,
which has perhaps arisen from his having used different names for the
same bird in noting down his observations in different years. Five
different names are employed in the Calendar to designate some species
of willow wren. The first named, i.e. the " small line-rested willow
wren," appearing on the 19th of March, and called in the text " the
chirper," is said to have black legs ; this is the Chiff-chaff, Ph. rvfa.
The second appearing on April 11, as the " middle yellow wren," the
third on April 14, as the " second willow or laughing wren," and the fifth
on April 17, as the " middle willow wren," must all be referred to one and
QUILL FEATHERS OF THE WOOD WREN.
the same species, namely the Willow wren par excellence Ph. trochihis
of modern naturalists. The fourth, entered under date April 17,
as the " large shivering willow wren," must be the Wood wren Ph.
sibilatrix.
The three British species of willow wrens may be thus distinguished.
The Wood Avren {Ph. sibilatrix) is the largest of the three, measuring in
length about 5'2 inches, in wing 3 inches, and tarsus 07 inches. It has
OF 8ELBORNE. 57
notes, and that constantly, than those two that I am
acquainted with; for the one has a joyous, easy laughing
note ; the other a harsh loud chirp. The former is every way
larger, and three-quarters of an inch longer, and weighs two
drams and a half ; while the latter weighs but two ; so the
songster is one-fifth heavier than the chirper. The chirper
(being the first summer-bird of passage that is heard, the
comparatively the longest wings, the latter when closed covering three-
fourths of the tail, and the longest legs. In the wing the second
primary is nearly equal in length to the fourth as shown in the cut
opposite, while the third and fourth have their outer webs sloped off
towards the extremity (this peculiarity seems to have been inadvertently
overlooked by the artist). In colour it is much greener above, and
of a purer white beneath than either of its congeners. The legs are
flesh-coloured. The Willow wren (Ph. trochilus) measures in length
as nearly as possible 5 inches, wing 2'6 and tarsus 07. The wing is thus
comparatively shorter, the second primary being equal to the sixth,
and the third, fourth and fifth with their outer webs sloped off towards
the extremity.
QUILL-FEATHERS OF THE WILLOW WREN.
In colour it is the yellowest of the three species, and this is parti-
cularly observable in young birds in the plumage of their first autumn.
The legs are flesh-coloured.
The Chiff-chaff (Ph. rufd) is the smallest of the three, measuring in
length about 4'7 inches, wing 2'4, and tarsus 0'6. The wing is re-
QTJILL-FEATHERS OF THE CHIFF-CHAFF.
markably short, the second primary being about equal to or no longer
than the seventh, and the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth have their outer
webs sloped off towards the extremity.
In regard to colour, greenish brown is the prevailing tint above,
white tinged with yellow beneath. The legs are hair brown. — ED.
58 NATURAL HISTORY
wryneck sometimes excepted) begins his two notes in the
middle of March, and continues them through the spring
and summer till the end of August, as appears by my
journals. The legs of the larger of these two are flesh-
coloured ; of the less, black.
The grasshopper-lark 1 began his sibilous note in my fields
last Saturday. Nothing can be more amusing than the
whisper of this little bird, which seems to be close by, though
at a hundred yards distance ; and when close at your ear, is
scarce any louder than when a great way off. Had I not been
a little acquainted with insects, and known that the grass-
hopper kind is not yet hatched, I should have hardly be-
lieved but that it had been a Locusta whispering in the
bushes. The country people laugh when you tell them that
it is the note of a bird. It is a most artful creature, skulk-
ing in the thickest part of a bush ; and will sing at a yard
distance, provided it be concealed. I was obliged to get a
person to go on the other side of the hedge where it haunted ;
and then it would run, creeping like a mouse, before us for a
hundred yards together, through the bottom of the thorns ;
yet it would not come into fair sight ; but in a morning early,
and when undisturbed, it sings on the top of a twig, gaping
and shivering with its wings. Mr. Ray himself had no
knowledge of this bird, but received his account from Mr.
Johnson, who apparently confounds it with the Reguli non
cristati? from which it is very distinct. See Ray's Philoso-
phical Letters, p. 108.
The flycatcher (Stoparola) has not yet appeared ; it
usually breeds in my vine.
The redstart begins to sing ; its note is short and imper-
fect, but is continued till about the middle of June.
The willow wrens (the smaller sort) are horrid pests in a
garden, destroying the pease, cherries, currants, &c. ;3 and
are so tame that a gun will not scare them.
1 The grasshopper- warbler, Salicaria locustella (Latham).
2 The willow wrens.
3 This sentence has possibly led to the destruction of many of
these little birds, which are in truth peculiarly the gardener's friends
OF SELBORNE. 59
A List of the Summer Birds of Passage discovered in this Neighbour-
hood, ranged somewhat in the Order in which they appear:
Linruei Nomina.
Smallest willow wren, Motacilla trochilus : *
Wryneck, Yunx torquilla :
House swallow, Hirundo rustica :
Martin, Hirundo urbica:
Sand martin, Hirundo riparia :
Cuckoo, Cuculus canorus:
Nightingale, Motacilla luscinia :
Blackcap, Motacilla atricapilla :
The Rev. W. Herbert observed that his gardeners were in the habit of
catching the hens on their nests in the strawberry beds, and killing them,
under the impression that they made great havoc among the cherries ;
yet he affirmed that they never tasted the fruit, nor could those which
were reared from the nest in confinement be induced to touch it. They
merely peck off the Aphides which are injurious to the fruit trees.
. The birds which were mistaken for them are the young of the garden
warbler {Sylvia hortensis), with which species apparently White was
not acquainted, as it is not mentioned by him, nor does it appear in his
list of summer birds. The young of this species have a strong tinge of
yellow on the sides, which disappears after the moult, and gives them
very much the appearance of the willow wren when seen upon the tree,
though they are larger and stouter, and in habits more nearly resemble
the blackcaps, with whom they are associated in the plunder of fruit.
Mr. Herbert remarks — " I could not persuade my gardener that the
yellow wrens did not eat the cherries, till he had shot some of the
petty chaps (garden- warbler) in the act of eating them, and compared
them with the wrens, when he became satisfied of the error. In order
to ascertain, beyond doubt, whether the yellow wrens ever eat fruit, I
left some which had been reared tame from the nest, and of course were
more likely to feed upon any new thing than the wild birds, without
victuals, till they were very hungry, and I then offered them little bits
of ripe cherry. They seized them with avidity, but immediately threw
them down again, and it was evident that they would rather have
starved than eat the fruit. I had no doubt of the fact, but I wished to
set the question completely at rest ; for I have seen them pulling the
leaves of the cherry-trees so near the fruit, that any person might be de-
ceived, and think they were eating it, and the young of the pettychaps
(garden- warbler) look so like them, that I am not in the least surprised
at their having got into bad repute with the gardeners." — ED.
1 White seems to have applied the Latin name Motacilla trochilus
to three different birds in this list, probably because he was unable to
identify them with the Latin names respectively bestowed on them by
older authors. He therefore employed the expression Moiacilla
trochilus as he would say " a kind of willow wren." — ED.
60 NATURAL HISTORY
Whitethroat, Motacilla syhia :
Middle willow wren, Motacilla trochilus:
Swift, Hirundo apus :
Stone Curlew ? Charadrius cedicnemus f
Turtle-dove? Turtur Aldrovandi ?
Grasshopper lark, Alauda trivialis:
Landrail, Eallus crex :
Largest willow wren, Motacilla trochilus :
Redstart, Motacilla phcenicurus :
Goatsucker or Fern-owl, Caprimulgus europceus :
Flycatcher, Muscicapa grisola.
My countrymen talk much of a bird that makes a clatter
with his bill against a dead bough, or some old pales, calling
it a jar- bird. I procured one to be shot in the very fact;
it proved to be the Sitta europcea (the nuthatch) . Mr. Ray
says that the less spotted woodpecker does the same. This
noise may be heard a furlong or more.
Now is the only time to ascertain the short-winged sum-
mer birds ; for, when the leaf is out, there is no making any
remarks on such a restless tribe ; and, when once the young
begin to appear, it is all confusion ; there is no distinction
of genus, species, or sex.
In breeding time snipes play over the moors, piping and
humming ; they always hum as they are descending. Is not
their hum ventriloquous like that of the turkey ? Some
suspect it is made by their wings.1
This morning I saw the golden-crowned wren, whose
crown glitters like burnished gold. It often hangs, like a
titmouse, with its back downwards.
1 The " humming " of the snipe has already been adverted to in Letter
X., and will be found again noticed in Letter XXXIX. See foot-note
antea, p. 35. In addition to the authorities there quoted, the reader
may be referred on this subject to Stevenson's " Birds of Norfolk,"
vol. ii. p. 316, and Saxby's " Birds of Shetland," p. 204. The last-
named author remarks : " The many years' intimate acquaintance with
the bird and its habits which I have enjoyed, confirms me in the now
generally received opinion that the 'drumming' is produced by the
vibration of the wings alone." — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 61
LETTEE XVII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, June 18, 1768.
Wednesday last arrived your agreeable
letter of June the 10th. It gives me great
satisfaction to find that you pursue these
studies still with such vigour, and are in
such forwardness with regard . to reptiles
and fishes.
The reptiles, few as they are, I am not acquainted with,
so well as I could wish, with regard to their natural history.
There is a degree of dubiousness and obscurity attending
the propagation of this class of animals, something analogous
to that of the Cryptogamia in the sexual system of plants ;
and the case is the same with regard to some of the fishes ;
as the eel, &C.1
The method in which toads procreate and bring forth
seems to be very much in the dark. Some authors say that
they are viviparous ; and yet Ray classes them among his
oviparous animals ;2 and is silent with regard to the manner
of their bringing forth. Perhaps they may be sVw plv worcxot,
£^co <TE £COOTOXO», as is known to be the case with the viper.
The copulation of frogs (or at least the appearance of it —
for Swammerdam proves that the male has no penis intrans)
is notorious to everybody ; because we see them sticking
upon each others' backs for a month together in the spring
and yet I never saw or read of toads being observed in the
same situation.3
1 Since this observation was published it has been demonstrated by
Mr. Yarrell that eels deposit their spawn like other fishes. — ED.
2 Toads are oviparous. — ED.
3 In this respect toads do not differ from frogs. — ED.
62 NATURAL HISTORY
It is strange that the matter with regard to the venom of
toads has not been yet settled.1 That they are not noxious
to some animals is plain ; for ducks, buzzards, owls, stone
curlews, and snakes eat them, to my knowlege, with impu-
nity. And I well remember the time, but was not eye-
witness to the fact (though numbers of persons were) , when
a quack, at this village, ate a toad to make the country
people stare ; afterwards he drank oil.
I have been informed also, from undoubted authority, that
some ladies (ladies you will say of peculiar taste) took a
fancy to a toad, which they nourished, summer after summer,
for many years, till he grew to a monstrous size, with the
maggots which turn to flesh flies. The reptile used to come
forth every evening from a hole under the garden steps ;
and was taken up, after supper, on the table to be fed.
But at last a tame raven, kenning him as he put forth his
head, gave him such a severe stroke with his horny beak as
put out one eye. After this accident the creature languished
for some time and died.
1 This question has since been set at rest. The old prejudice that
they possess the power of communicating poison by their bite is wholly
unfounded; and the fluid which they eject from the cloaca when
frightened or handled is, in their case as in frogs, pure limpid water.
The skin, however, has been ascertained by Dr. Davy to secrete an acid
liquid, not perhaps poisonous, but capable of producing an uncomfor-
table sensation on the tongue ; a secretion of somewhat similar qualities
is poured out on the surface of the common land salamander of Europe.
Mr. Bell has remarked that " the aqueous fluid above mentioned,
which is thrown out in considerable quantities by a frog or toad on being
taken in the hand, is held in a double bladder which opens into the
cloaca ; and this fact is connected with the absorbing power of the skin.
The cutaneous surface of these animals is now known to serve the pur-
poses of respiration ; but in order to perform this function, it is necessary
that it should be kept constantly in a moist condition. When placed
in water or in a sufficiently damp situation, the surface of the body
absorbs a considerable quantity of water, which is conveyed to the re-
ceptacle above mentioned, there to remain as in a reservoir for future
use ; and if the animal be exposed to a dry atmosphere, the fluid is
re- absorbed, and again secreted on the surface of the skin, in order to
keep up its respiratory function. This is the true history of the poison-
ous liquid of toads, as it is considered, which renders them the objects
of dread and hatred to the ignorant of all parts of the country." — ED.
OF 8ELBORNE. 63
I need not remind a gentleman of your extensive reading
of the excellent account there is from Mr. Derham, in Ray's
"Wisdom of God in the Creation" (p. 365), concerning the
migration of frogs from their breeding ponds. In this
account he at once subverts that foolish opinion of their
dropping from the clouds in rain ; showing that it is from
the grateful coolness and moisture of those showers that
they are tempted to set out on their travels, which they defer
till those fall. Frogs are as yet in their tadpole state ;
but, in a few weeks, our lanes, paths, fields will swarm for
a few days with myriads of those emigrants, no larger than
my little finger nail. Swammerdam gives a most accurate
account of the method and situation in which the male im-
pregnates the spawn of the female. How wonderful is the
economy of Providence with regard to the limbs of so vile a
reptile ! While it is an aquatic it has a fish-like tail, and no
legs ; as soon as the legs sprout, the tail drops off as useless,
and the animal betakes itself to the land I1
Merret, I trust, is widely mistaken when he advances
that the Rana arborea is an English reptile ; it abounds in
Germany and Switzerland.
It is to be remembered that the Salamandra aquatica of
Ray (the water-newt or eft) will frequently bite at the
angler's bait, and is often caught on his hook. I used to
take it for granted that the Salamandra aquatica was hatched,
lived, and died, in the water. But John Ellis, Esq., F. R. S.,
(the coralline Ellis) , asserts, in a letter to the Royal Society,
dated June the 5th, 1766, in his account of the mud inguana,
an amphibious bipes from South Carolina, that the water-eft,
1 Mr. Bell has pointed out that the whole of the typical Batrachia,
the frogs, toads, newts, salamanders, &c. undergo a complete metamor-
phosis. In the land species, v. hich from their habits have no constant
access to water, the aquatic portion of their existence, during which the
gills remain attached, cannot be passed in that medium in the same
manner as the frogs, &c. They undergo the metamorphosis therefore in
tbe oviduct, before they are excluded from the mother, and come forth
in the perfect condition. But in the other forms, the change takes
place in the water, and the young live there for a time in a fish-like
state, as regards not only their respiration, but most of the other
functions of life. — ED.
64 NATURAL HISTORY
or newt, is only the larva of the land-eft, as tadpoles are of
frogs. Lest I should be suspected to misunderstand his
meaning, I shall give it in his own words. Speaking of the
opercula, or coverings to the gills, of the mud inguana, he
proceeds to say that ' ' The form of these pennated coverings
approaches very near to what I have some time ago observed
in the larva, or aquatic state, of our English Lacerta, known
by the name of eft, or newt ; which serve them for coverings
to their gills, and for fins to swim with while in this state ;
and which they lose, as well as the fins of their tails, when
they change their state and become land animals, as I have
observed, by keeping them alive for some time myself/'
Linnaeus, in his Systerna Naturae, hints at what Mr. Ellis
advances, more than once.
Providence has been so indulgent to us as to allow of
but one venomous reptile of the serpent kind in these
kingdoms, and that is the viper. As you propose the good
of mankind to be an object of your publications, you will not
omit to mention common salad-oil as a sovereign remedy
against the bite of the viper.1
As to the blind worm (Anguis fragilis, so called because
it snaps in sunder with a small blow), I have found, on
examination, that it is perfectly innocuous.2
A neighbouring yeoman (to whom I am indebted for
some good hints) killed and opened a female viper about
1 We agree with Mr. Bell in thinking that the efficacy of oil as a
remedy against the bite of the viper has probably been overrated. It is
generally believed in those parts of the country where vipers abound to
be very efficacious as an external application, as is also the fat of the
reptile itself. The application of ammonia, however, both externally
and internally, is recommended on much surer grounds. — ED.
2 A blindworm, which Mr. Daniel kept for some weeks in con-
finement, fed upon the little white slug (Limax agrestis, Linn.) so
common in fields and gardens, eating six or seven of them one after the
other ; but it did not eat every day. It invariably took them in one
position : elevating its head slowly above its victim, it would sud-
denly seize the slug by the middle, in the same manner that a ferret or
dog will generally take a rat by the loins ; it would then hold it thus
sometimes for more than a minute, when it would pass its prey through
its jaws, and swallow the slu<r head foremost. It refused the larger
slugs, and would not touch either young frogs or mice. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 65
the 27th of May ; he found her filled with a chain of eleven
eggs, about the size of those of a blackbird ; but none of
them were advanced so far towards a state of maturity as to
contain any rudiments of young. Though they are ovipa-
rous, yet they are viviparous also, hatching their young
within their bellies, and then bringing them forth. Whereas
snakes lay chains of eggs every summer in my melon
beds, in spite of all that my people can do to prevent
them ; which eggs do not hatch till the spring following, as
I have often experienced. Several intelligent folks assure
me that they have seen the viper open her mouth and
admit her helpless young down her throat on sudden sur-
prises, just as the female opossum does her brood into the
pouch under her belly, upon the like emergencies : and yet
the London viper-catchers insist on it, to Mr. Barrington,
that no such thing ever happens.1 The serpent kind eat, I
believe, but once in a year ; or, rather, but only just at one
season of the year.2 Country people talk much of a water-
snake, but, I am pretty sure, without any reason ; for the
common snake (Coluber natrix) delights much to sport in
the water, perhaps with a view to procure frogs and other
food.
I cannot well guess how you are to make out your twelve
1 Upon this point Mr. Bell says : — I have been assured by a very
honest and worthy gardener in Dorsetshire, that he had seen the young
vipers enter the mouth of the mother when alarmed. I have never
been able to obtain further evidence of the fact, though I have made
the most extensive inquiries in my power. If it be untrue, the popular
error may have arisen from the circumstance of fully formed young
having been found in the abdomen of the mother, ready to be excluded.
The actions of the young which were emancipated from the oviduct by
White on a subsequent occasion (see Letter XXXI. to Daines Bar-
rington) do not appear necessarily to bear upon the question, as there
are many instances of the young of animals manifesting the habits and
instincts of their species immediately on coming into the world — as in
the case of young ducks seeking the water, &c. — ED.
2 The slow power of digestion possessed by serpents renders them
capable of remaining a long time without food. If a snake swallows a
frog, or a viper a mouse, it is several weeks before it is digested. It
is probable, therefore, that they do not eat above three or four times
in the course of a summer, and in winter not at all. — ED.
P
66 NATURAL HISTORY
species of reptiles, unless it be by the various species, or
rather varieties, of our Lacertce, of which Ray enumerates
five. I have not had opportunity of ascertaining these ;
but remember well to have seen, formerly, several beautiful
green Lacertce on the sunny sandbanks near Farnham, in
Surrey ; 1 and Ray admits there are such in Ireland.
LETTER XVIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, July 27, 1768.
RECEIVED your obliging and communi-
cative letter of June the 28th, while I was
on a visit at a gentleman's house, where I
had neither books to turn to, nor leisure to
sit down, to return you an answer to many
queries, which I wanted to resolve in the best manner that
I am able.
A person, by my order, has searched our brooks, but
could find no such fish as the Gasterosteus pungitius ; he
found the Gasterosteus aculeatus in plenty.2 This morning,
in a basket, I packed a little earthen pot full of wet moss,
and in it some sticklebacks, male and female ; the females
big with spawn ; some lamperns ; some bulls-heads ; but I
could procure no minnows. The basket will be in Fleet
Street by eight this evening; so I hope Mazel3 will have
them fresh and fair to-morrow morning. I gave some
1 See Letter XXII.
2 G. pungitius, the ten-spinecl stickleback, although generally dis-
tributed, seems to be nowhere so abundant as the common stickleback,
G. aculeatus. — ED.
3 Peter Mazel, the engraver of the plates of Pennant's ki .British
Zoology." — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 67
directions, in a letter, to what particulars the engraver
should be attentive.
Finding, while I was on a visit, that I was within a
reasonable distance of Ambreslmry, I sent a servant over to
that town, and procured several living specimens of loaches,
which he brought safe and brisk in a glass decanter. They
were taken in the gullies that were cut for watering the
meadows.1 From these fishes (whieh measured from two
to four inches in length) I took the following description :
" The loach, in its general aspect, has a pellucid appear-
ance ; its back is mottled with irregular collections of small
black dots, not reaching much below the linea latemlis, as
are the back and tail fins ; a black line runs from each eye
down to the nose ; its belly is of a silvery white ; the upper
jaw projects beyond the lower, and is surrounded with six
feelers, three on each side ; its pectoral fins are large, its
ventral much smaller; the fin behind its anus small; its
dorsal fin large, containing eight spines ; its tail, where it
joins to the tail fin, remarkably broad, without any taper-
ness, so as to be characteristic of this genus ; the tail fin is
broad, and square at the end. From the breadth and
muscular strength of the tail it appears to be an active
nimble fish."
In my visit I was not very far from Hungerford, and did
not forget to make some inquiries concerning the wonder-
ful method of curing cancers by means of toads. Several
intelligent persons, both gentry and clergy, do, I find, give
a great deal of credit to what was asserted in the papers ;
and I myself dined with a clergyman who seemed to be
persuaded that what is related is matter of fact ; but, when
I came to attend to his account, I thought I discerned
circumstances which did not a little invalidate the woman's
story of the manner in which she came by her skill. She
says of herself, " that labouring under a virulent cancer,
1 Mr. Bennett states that Ambresbury had become notorious for its
loaches, on account of sportsmen there frequently, in frolic, swallowing
one of them alive in a glass of white wine ; but the fish is by no means
a local one. It occurs generally throughout the country in brooks and
rivulets, lurking under stones. — ED.
68 NATURAL HISTORY
she went to some church where there was a vast crowd ; on
going into a pew, she was accosted by a strange clergy-
man ; who, after expressing compassion for her situation,
told her that if she would make such an application of
living toads as is mentioned, she would be well/' Now is it
likely that this unknown gentleman should express so much
tenderness for this single sufferer, and not feel any for the
many thousands that daily languish under this terrible dis-
order ? Would he not have made use of this invaluable
nostrum for his own emolument ; or, at least, by some
means of publication or other, have found a method oi
making it public for the good of mankind ? In short, thie
woman (as it appears to me) having set up for a cancer-
doctress, finds it expedient to amuse the country with this
dark and mysterious relation.
The water-eft has not, that I can discern, the least appear-
ance of any gills ; for want of which it is continually rising
to the surface of the water to take in fresh air.1 I opened a
big-bellied one, indeed, and found it full of spawn. Not
that this circumstance at all invalidates the assertion that
they are larvce : for the larvce of insects are full of eggs,
which they exclude the instant they enter their last state.
The water-eft is continually climbing over the brims of the
vessel, within which we keep it in water, and wandering
away : and people every summer see numbers crawling out
of the pools where they are hatched, up the dry banks.
There are varieties of them, differing in colour ; and some
have fins up their tail and back, and some have not.2
1 This applies only to the adult ; the young during the first months
of their existence have external gills. — ED.
2 The appearance of fin-like expansions on the back and tail of the
several species of Triton is confined to the male, and is only found in
that sex at the season of reproduction. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 69
LETTER XIX.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Aug. 17, 1768.
HAVE now, past dispute,, made out three
distinct species of the willow wrens (Mota-
cillce trochili) which constantly and inva-
riably use distinct notes.1 But at the same
time, I am obliged to confess that I know
nothing of your willow lark.2 In my letter of April the
18th, I had told you peremptorily that I knew your willow
lark, but had not seen it then : but, when I came to procure
it, it proved, in all respects, a very Motacilla trochilus; only
that it is a size larger than the two other, and the yellow
green of the whole upper part of the body is more vivid,
and the belly of a clearer white/ I have specimens of the
three sorts now lying before me ; and can discern that there
are three gradations of sizes, and that the least has black
legs, and ihe other two flesh-coloured ones. The yellowest
bird is considerably the largest, and has its quill feathers
and secondary feathers tipped with white, which the others
have not. This last haunts only the tops of trees in high
beechen woods, and makes a sibilous grasshopper-like noise,
now and then, at short intervals, shivering a little with its
wings when it sings ; and is, I make no doubt now, the
Regulus non cristatus of Ray ; which he says ' ' cantat voce
striduld locustm" Yet this great ornithologist never sus-
pected that there were three species.
1 See antea, pp. 56, 57.
2 Brit. Zool. edit. 1776, octavo, p. 381.— G. W.
3 This is evidently the Wood wren. Ph. aibilatrix. — ED.
70
NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XX.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Oct. 3, 1768.
T is, I find, in zoology, as in botany : all
nature is so full, that that district pro-
duces the greatest variety which is the
most examined. Several birds, which are
said to belong to the north only, are, it
seems, often in the south. I have discovered this summer
three species of birds with us, which writers mention as only
to be seen in the northern counties.
The first that was brought me (on the 14th of May) was
the sandpiper (Tringa hypoleucos) : it was a cock bird, and
haunted the banks of some ponds near the village ; and, as
it had a companion, doubtless intended to have bred near
that water. Besides, the owner has told me since, that, on
recollection, he has seen some of the same birds round his
ponds in former summers.
The next bird that I procured (on tfac 21st of May) was
a male red-backed butcher-bird (Lanius collurio) . My neigh-
bour, who shot it, says that it might easily have escaped his
notice, had not the outcries and chatterings of the white-
throats and other small birds drawn his attention to the
bush where it was : its craw was filled with the legs and
wings of beetles.
The next rare birds (which were procured for me last
week) were some ring-ousels (Turdi torquati) .
This week twelve months a gentleman from London,
being with us, was amusing himself with a gun, and found,
he told us, on an old yew hedge where there were berries,
some birds like blackbirds, with rings of white round their
necks : a neighbouring farmer also at the same time ob-
served the same; but, as no specimens were procured, littlo
OF 8ELSORNE. 71
notice was taken. I mentioned this circumstance to you in
my letter of November the 4th, 1767 : (you however paid
but small regard to what I said, as I had not seen these
birds myself :) but last week the aforesaid farmer, seeing a
large flock, twenty or thirty, of these birds, shot two cocks
and two hens : and says, on recollection, that he remembers
to have observed these birds again last spring, about Lady-
day, as it were, on their return to the north. Now per-
haps these ousels are not the ousels of the north of England,
but belong to the more northern parts of Europe ; and may
retire before the excessive rigour of the frosts in those
parts ; and return to breed in the spring, when the cold
abates. If this be the case, here is discovered a new bird
of winter passage, concerning whose migrations the writers
are silent : but if these birds should prove the ousels of the
north of England, then here is a migration disclosed within
our own kingdom never before remarked. It does not yet
appear whether they retire beyond the bounds of our island
to the south ; but it is most probable that they usually do,
or else one cannot suppose that they would have continued
so long unnoticed in the southern countries. The ousel is
larger than a blackbird, and feeds on haws; but last autumn
(when there were no haws) it fed on yew-berries : in the
spring it feeds on ivy-berries, which ripen only at that
season, in March and April.
I must not omit to tell you (as you have been so lately
on the study of reptiles) that my people, every now and
then, of late, draw up with a bucket of water from my well,
which is sixty-three feet deep, a large black warty lizard
with a fin tail and yellow belly.1 How they first came
down at that depth, and how they were ever to have got
out thence without help, is more than I am able to say.
My thanks are due to you for your trouble and care in
the examination of a buck's head. As far as your dis-
coveries reach at present, they seem much to corroborate my
suspicions ; and I hope Mr. - - may find reason to give
his decision in my favour; and then, I think, we may
1 This is Triton, paluslris; as to the "lin-tail" see note, p. 68. — ED.
72 NATURAL HISTORY
advance this extraordinary provision of nature as a new in-
stance of the wisdom of God in the creation.
As yet I have not quite done with my history of the
(Edicnemus, or stone-curlew ; for I shall desire a gentleman
in Sussex (near whose house these birds congregate in vast
flocks in the autumn) to observe nicely when they leave him
(if they do leave him) , and when they return again in the
spring : I was with this gentleman lately, and saw several
single birds.
LETTER XXL
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Nov. 28, 1768.
regard to the (Edicnemus , or stone-
curlew, I intend to write very soon to my
friend near Chichester, in whose neighbour-
hood these birds seem most to abound ;
and shall urge him to take particular notice
when they begin to congregate, and afterward to watch
them most narrowly whether they do not withdraw them-
selves during the dead of the winter. When I have ob-
tained information with respect to this circumstance, I
shall have finished my history of the stone- curlew ; which I
hope will prove to your satisfaction, as it will be, I trust,
very near the truth.1 This gentleman, as he occupies a
large farm of his own, and is abroad early and late, will be a
very proper spy upon the motions of these birds : and besides,
as I have prevailed on him to buy the " Naturalist's Journal/'
(with which he is much delighted,) I shall expect that ha
will be very exact in his dates.2 It is very extraordinary,
1 This bird is again alluded to in Letter XXXIII. to Pennant,— ED.
2 The " Naturalist's Journal." Printed for W. Sandby, Fleet Street,
London; 1767. Price one shilling and sixpence. — ED.
OF SELBOENE.
73
as you observe, that a bird so common with us should never
straggle to you.1
And here will be the proper est place to mentioa, while
I think of it, an anecdote which the above mentioned gentle-
man told me when I was last at his house ; which was that,
in a warren joining to his outlet, many daws (Gorvi mone-
dulce) build every year in the rabbit burrows under ground.
The way he and his brothers used to take their nests, while
they were boys, was by listening at the mouths of the holes ;
and, if they heard the young ones cry, they twisted the nest
out with a forked stick. Some waterfowls (viz. the puffins)
JACKDAW.
breed, I know, in that manner ; but I should never have
suspected the daws of building in holes on the flat ground.2
1 The Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert has observed that this bird is met
with only on the chalk. He used to find it and its tAvo eggs on the bare
ground in September, at Highclere, in Hampshire, but only where there
was a chalk subsoil. It never strayed to the sand or gravel, and con-
sequently was not upon the lieaths; but in the chalky turnip fields.
This statement, though it may be true enough of the locality to which
it refers, is not of universal application. See Stevenson's " Birds of
Norfolk," vol. ii. pp. 51-64.— ED.
2 The stock-dove and the shell-drake may also be mentioned as
species which make use of deserted rabbit -burrows to nest in. — ED.
74 NATURAL HISTORY
Another very unlikely spot is made use of by daws as a
place to breed in, and that is Stonehenge. These birds
deposit their nests in the interstices between the upright
and the impost stones of that amazing work of antiquity :
which circumstance alone speaks the prodigious height of
the upright stones, that they should be tall enough to secure
those nests from the annoyance of shepherd boys, who are
always idling round that place.
One of my neighbours last Saturday, November the 26th,
saw a martin in a sheltered bottom : the sun shone warm,
and the bird was hawking briskly after the flies. I am
now perfectly satisfied that they do not all leave this island
in the winter.
You judge very right, I think, in speaking with reserve
and caution concerning the cures done by toads : for, let
people advance what they will on such subjects, yet there is
such a propensity in mankind towards deceiving and being
deceived, that one cannot safely relate any thing from com-
mon report, especially in print, without expressing some
degree of doubt and suspicion.
Your approbation, with regard to my new discovery of
the migration of the ring-ousel, gives me satisfaction; and
I find you concur with me in suspecting that they are
foreign birds which visit us. You will be sure, I hope, not
to omit to make inquiry whether your ring-ousels leave
your rocks in the autumn. What puzzles me most, is the
very short stay they make with us ; for in about three
weeks they are all gone. I shall be very curious to remark
whether they will call on us at their return in the spring, as
they did last year.
I want to be better informed with regard to ichthyology.1
If fortune had settled me near the seaside, or near some
1 At the time when White's remark was made, Pennant had in pre-
paration the third volume of his " British Zoology," containing the
fishes, which was published in the folio wing year. This work, however,
has naturally been superseded by others of more modern date and
greater merit ; notably, Yarrell's " History of British Fishes," Couch's
" Fishes of the British Islands," and Giinther's " Catalogue of Fishes in
the British Museum." — ED.
OF SELRORNE. 75
great river, my natural propensity would soon have urged
me to have made myself acquainted with their productions :
but as I have lived mostly in inland parts, and in an upland
district, my knowledge of fishes extends little farther than
to those common sorts which our brooks and lakes pro-
duce.
LETTER XXII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIKE.
SEABORNE, Jan. 2, 1769.
S to the peculiarity of jackdaws building with
us under the ground in rabbit-burrows, you
have, in part, hit upon the reason; for, in
reality, there are hardly any towers or
steeples in all this country. And perhaps,
Norfolk excepted, Hampshire and Sussex are as meanly
furnished with churches as almost any counties in the
kingdom. We have many livings of two or three hun-
dred pounds a year whose houses of worship make little
better appearance than dove-cots. When I first saw
Northamptonshire, Cambridgeshire, and Huntingdonshire,
and the fens of Lincolnshire, I was amazed at the number
of spires which presented themselves in every point of
view. As an admirer of prospects, I have reason to la-
ment this want in my own country; for such objects are
very necessary ingredients in an elegant landscape.
What you mention with respect to reclaimed toads
raises my curiosity. An ancient author, though no natu-
ralist, has well remarked that " Every kind of beasts, and
of birds, and of serpents, and things in the sea, is tamed,
and hath been tamed, of mankind."1
It is a satisfaction to me to find that a green lizard has
actually been procured for you in Devonshire; because it
1 James iii. 7.
76 NATURAL HISTORY
corroborates my discovery, which I made many years ago,
of the same sort, on a sunny sandbank near Farnham, in
Surrey. I am well acquainted with the south hams of
Devonshire ; and can suppose that district, from its south-
erly situation, to be a proper habitation for such animals in
their best colours.1
Since the ring-ousels of your vast mountains do certainly
not forsake them against winter, our suspicions that those
which visit this neighbourhood about Michaelmas are not
English birds, but driven from the more northern parts of
Europe by the frosts, are still more reasonable ; and it will
be worth your pains to endeavour to trace from whence they
come, and to inquire why they make so very short a stay.
In your account of your error with regard to the two
species of herons, you incidentally gave me great entertain-
ment in your description of the heronry at Cressi Hall;
which is a curiosity I never could manage to see. Four-
score nests of such a bird on one tree is a rarity which I
would ride half as many miles to have a sight of. Pray be
sure to tell me in your next whose seat Cressi Hall is, and
near what town it lies.'2 I have often thought that those
vast extents of fens have never been sufficiently explored.
If half a dozen gentlemen, furnished with a good strength
of water-spaniels, were to beat them over for a week, they
would certainly find more species.
There is no bird, I believe, whose manners I have
studied more than those of the Caprimulgus (the goat-
sucker) , as it is a wonderful and curious creature : but I have
always found that though sometimes it may chatter as it
flies, as I know it does, yet in general it utters its jarring
note sitting on a bough : and I have for many a half hour
watched it as it sat with its under mandible quivering, and
particularly this summer. It perches usually on a bare
1 Mr. Bell thinks these were probably unusually bright and large
individuals of Lacerta stirpium, now ascertained to be indigenous to this
country. See Jenyns, " Man. Brit. Vert. An." p. 291.— ED.
2 Cressi or Cressy Hall, situate near Spalding, in Lincolnshire, was the
seat of a branch of the ancient family of Heron. The heronry there has
been long since destroyed. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 77
twig, with, its head lower than its tail, in an attitude well
expressed by your draughtsman in the folio British Zoology.
This bird is most punctual in beginning its song exactly at
the close of day ; so exactly that I have known it strike up
more than once or twice just at the report of the Ports-
mouth evening gun, which we can hear when the weather
is still. It appears to me past all doubt that its notes are
formed by organic impulse, by the powers of the parts of
its windpipe, formed for sound, just as cats purr. You will
credit me, I hope, when I assure you that, as my neigh-
bours were assembled in an hermitage on the side of a
steep hill where we drink tea,1 one of these churn- owls
came and settled on the cross of that little straw edifice and
began to chatter, and continued his note for many minutes ;
and we were all struck with wonder to find that the organs
of that little animal, when put in motion, gave a sensible
vibration to the whole building ! This bird also some-
times makes a small squeak, repeated four or five times;
and I have observed that to happen when the cock has
been pursuing the hen in a toying way through the boughs
of a tree.
It would not be at all strange if your bat, which you
have procured, should prove a new one, since five species
have been found in the neighbouring kingdom. The
great sort that I mentioned is certainly a nondescript : I
saw but one this summer, and that I had no opportunity of
taking.
Your account of the Indian grass was entertaining. I
am no angler myself ; but inquiring' of those that are, what
they supposed that part of their tackle to be made of? they
replied, " Of the intestines of a silk- worm."
Though I must not pretend to great skill in entomology,
yet I cannot say that I am ignorant of that kind of know-
ledge : I may now and then perhaps be able to furnish you
with a little information.
The vast rains ceased with us much about the same time
as with you, and since we have had delicate weather. Mr.
1 A vignette of this hermitage appears on the title-page. — ED.
78 NATURAL HISTORY
Barker, who has measured the rain for more than thirty
years, says, in a late letter, that more has fallen this year
than in any he ever attended to ; though, from July, 1763,
to January, 1764, more fell than in any seven months of
this year.
LETTER XXIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Feb. 28, 1769.
is not improbable that the Guernsey lizard
and our green lizards may be specifically
the same; all that I know is, that, when
some years ago many Guernsey lizards were
turned looso in Pembroke College garden,
in the University of Oxford, they lived a great while, and
seemed to enjoy themselves very well, but never bred.
Whether this circumstance will prove anything either way I
shall not pretend to say.
I return you thanks for your account of Cressi Hall;
but recollect, not without regret, that in June, 1746, I was
visiting for a week together at Spalding, without ever
being told that such a curiosity was just at hand. Pray
send me word in your next what sort of tree it is that
contains such a quantity of herons' nests ; and whether the
heronry consist of a whole grove or wood, or only of a few
trees.
It gave me satisfaction to find we accorded so well about
the Caprimulgus : all I contended for was to prove that it
often chatters sitting as well as flying ; and therefore the
noise was voluntary, and from organic impulse, and not
from the resistance of the air against the hollow of its mouth
and throat.
If ever I saw anything like actual migration, it was last
Michaelmas- day. I was travelling, and out early in the
morning : at first there was a vast fog ; but by the time
OF SELBOENE. 79
that I was got seven or eight miles from home towards the
coast, the sun broke out into a delicate warm day. We
were then on a large heath or common, and I could discern,
as the mist began to break away, great numbers of swal-
lows (Hirundines rusticce) clustering on the stunted shrubs
and bushes, as if they had roosted there all night. As
soon as the air became clear and pleasant they all were
on the wing at once ; and, by a placid and easy flight,
proceeded on southward towards the sea : after this I did
not see any more flocks, only now and then a straggler.
SWALLOW.
I cannot agree with those persons that assert that the
swallow kind disappear some and some gradually, as they
come, for the bulk of them seem to withdraw at once : only
some stragglers stay behind a long while, and do never,
there is the greatest reason to believe, leave this island.
Swallows seem to lay themselves up, and to come forth in a
warm day, as bats do continually of a warm evening, after
they have disappeared for weeks. For a very respectable
gentleman assured me that, as he was walking with some
friends under Merton Hall on a remarkably hot noon, either
in the last week in December or the first week in January,
he espied three or four swallows huddled together on the
moulding of one of the windows of that college. I have
frequently remarked that swallows are seen later at Oxford
80 NATURAL HISTORY
than elsewhere : is it owing to the vast massy buildings of
that place, to the many waters round it, or to what else ?
When I used to rise in a morning last autumn, and see
the swallows and martins clustering on the chimneys and
thatch of the neighbouring cottages, I could not help being
touched with a secret delight, mixed with some degree of
mortification ; with delight to observe with how much ardour
and punctuality those poor little birds obeyed the strong
impulse towards migration, or hiding, imprinted on their
minds by their great Creator ; and with some degree of
mortification, when I reflect that, after all our pains and in-
quiries, we are yet not quite certain to what regions they
do migrate ;l and are still farther embarrassed to find that
some do not actually migrate at all.
These reflections made so strong an impression on my
imagination, that they became productive of a composition
that may perhaps amuse you for a quarter of an hour when
next I have the honour of writing to you.
LETTER XXIY.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, May 29, 1769.
HE Scarabceus fullo2 I know very well,
having seen it in collections ; but have
never been able to discover one wild in its
natural state. Mr. Banks told me he
thought it might be found on the seacoast/
On the 13th of April, I went to the sheep-down, where
1 The winter haunts of the swallows are now well known to naturalists.
See an article on swallows, in continuation of a series on " Our Summer
Migrants," published by the writer in the "Field" of October 14th
and October 21st, 1871, in which a detailed reply is given to the
inquiries, "What do swallows feed upon?" and "Where do the
swallows go in winter?" — ED.
2 Melolontha fullo, Fabr. an insect of the same genus as the better
known cock-chafer Melolontha vulgaris.
3 Mr. Bennett has remarked that all the specimens of this fiiie chafer
that have yet been captured in England, and they are very far from numer-
OF SELBORNE. 81
the ring-ousels have been observed to make their appearance
at spring and fall, in their way perhaps to the north or
south ; and was much pleased to see three birds about the
usual spot. We shot a cock and a hen ; they were plump
and in high condition. The hen had but very small rudi-
ments of eggs within her, which proves they are late
breeders, whereas those species of the thrush kind that re-
main with us the whole year have fledged young before
that time. In their crops was nothing very distinguishable,
but somewhat that seemed like blades of vegetables nearly
digested. In autumn they feed on haws and yew-berries,
and in the spring on ivy-berries. I dressed one of these
MELOLONTHA FULLO.
birds, and found it juicy and well-flavoured. It is remark-
able, that they make but a few days' stay in their spring
visit, but rest near a fortnight at Michaelmas. These birds,
from the observations of three springs and two autumns,
are most punctual in their return ; and exhibit a new migra-
tion unnoticed by tho writers who supposed they never
were to be seen in any of the southern counties.
One of my neighbours lately brought me a new Salicciria,
which, at first, I suspected might have proved your willow
lark,1 but on a nicer examination, it answered much better
ous, have occurred on the coast of Kent. Dover seems to be the middle
point of their range, from which they extend westward as far as Hythe,
and northward to Sandwich. Mr. Stephens has recorded the capture, by
a lady, of no less than eight specimens in one year, in the neighbourhood
of Sandwich ; a number probably nearly equal to all the others that are
known to have been at any time taken in this country. — ED.
1 For this Salicaria, see Letter, August 30, 1769. — O. AV.
The birds to which White previously applied the generic term Salicaria
were the willow wrens, as already pointed out in note 1, p. 54, and
Pennant's willow lark, as shown in note 3, p. 69, was the wood wren, Ph.
G
82 NATURAL HISTORY
to the description of that species which you shot at Revesby,
in Lincolnshire.1 My bird I describe thus : " It is a size
less than the grasshopper lark ; the head, back, and coverts
of the wings, of a dusky brown, without those dark spots of
the grasshopper lark ; over each eye is a milkwhite stroke ;
the chin and throat are white, and the under parts of a
yellowish white ; the rump is tawny, and the feathers of the
tail sharp pointed ; the bill is dusky and sharp, and the legs
are dusky; the hinder claw long and crooked/'2 The per-
son that shot it says that it sung so like a reed sparrow that
he took it for one ; and that it sings all night : but this
account merits farther inquiry. For my part, I suspect it
is a second sort of Locustella, hinted at by Dr. Derham in
"Ray's Letters;" see p. 108. He also procured me a
grasshopper lark.
The question that you put with regard to those genera of
animals that are peculiar to America, viz. how they came
there, and whence ? is too puzzling for me to answer ; and
yet so obvious as often to have struck me with wonder. If
one looks into the writers on that subject, little satisfaction
is to be found. Ingenious men will readily advance plausi-
ble arguments to support whatever theory they shall choose
to maintain; but then the misfortune is, every one's hypo-
thesis is each as good as another's, since they are all founded
on conjecture. The late writers of this sort, in whom may
be seen all the arguments of those that have gone before,
as I remember, stock America from the western coast of
Africa, and the south of Europe ; and then break down the
isthmus that bridged over the Atlantic. But this is making
use of a violent piece of machinery ; it is a difficulty worthy
of the interposition of a god ! te Incredulus odi."
sibilatrix. But here he extends the term to include the sedge warblers,
which really belong to a well marked and very distinct group. — ED.
1 The seat of Sir Joseph Banks, where Pennant was staying on a visit
in May, 1767. — ED.
2 This is the sedge warbler, Salicaria pJiragmitis. The remark of
White's informant that the bird he procured " sung so like a reed sparrow"
is a mistake which a casual observer might easily make, since the sedge
warbler often sings concealed in a patch of reeds or sedge, while the un-
musical reed bunting (Embcriza schoeniclu!?), sitting conspicuously on a
reed top, gets all the credit for the song. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 83
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUinE,
THE
NATURALIST'S SUMMER EVENING WALK.
equidem credo, quia sit divinitus illis
lugeniuni. VIRG. Georg. i. 415.
HEN day declining sheds a milder gleam,
What time the May-fly1 haunts the pool or
stream ;
When the still owl skim*/ round the grassy
mead,
What time the timorous hare limps forth to feed ;
Then be the time to steal adown the vale,
And listen to the vagrant cuckoo's2 tale ;
To hear the clamorous curlew3 call his mate,
Or the soft quail his tender pain relate ;
To see the swallow sweep the darkening plain
Belated, to support her infant train ;
To mark the swift in rapid giddy ring
Dash round the steeple, unsubdued of wing:
Amusive birds ! say where your hid retreat
When the frost rages and the tempests beat ;
Whence your return, by such nice instinct led,
When spring, soft season, lifts her bloomy head ?
1 The angler's May-fly, the Ephemera vulgata, LINN, comes forth
from its aurelia state, and emerges out of the water, about six in the
evening, and dies about eleven at night, determining the date of its fly
state in about five or six hours. They usually begin to appear about
the 4th of June, and continue in succession for near a fortnight. See
Svvammerdam, Derham, Scopoli, &c. — C-. W.
2 Vagrant cuckoo ; so called because, being tied down by no incu-
bation or attendance about the nutrition of its young, it wanders with-
out control. — G. W.
3 The stone curlew, (Edicncmus crepitans. — En.
84 NATURAL HISTORY
Such baffled searches mock man's prying pricle,
The GOD of NATURE is your secret guide !
While deepening shades obscure the face of day
To yonder bench leaf-sheltered let us stray,
Till blended objects fail the swimming sight,
And all the fading landscape sinks in night ;
To hear the drowsy dorr come brushing by
With buzzing wing, or the shrill cricket l cry ;
To see the feeding bat glance through the wood ;
To catch the distant falling of the flood ;
While o'er the cliff th' awakened churn-owl hung
Through the still gloom protracts his chattering song ;
While high in air, and poised upon his wings,
Unseen, the soft enamoured woodlark2 sinks :
These, NATURES works, the curious mind employ,
Inspire a soothing melancholy joy :
As fancy warms, a pleasing kind of pain
Steals o'er the cheek, and thrills the creeping vein !
Each rural sight, each sound, each smell, combine ;
The tinkling sheep-bell, or the breath of kine;
The new-mown hay that scents the swelling breeze,
Or cottage chimney smoking through the trees.
The chilling night dews fall : — away, retire ;
For see, the glow-worm lights her amorous fire ! 3
Thus, ere night's veil had half obscured the sky,
Th' impatient damsel hung her lamp on high :
True to the signal, by love's meteor led,
Leander hastened to his Hero's bed.4
1 Gryllus campestris.
2 In hot summer nights woodlarks soar to a prodigious height, aud
hang singing in the air. — G. W.
3 The light of the female glow-worm (as she often crawls up the
stalk of a grass to make herself more conspicuous) is a signal to the
male, which is a slender dusky Scarab&ut. — G. W.
This is still the generally received notion, but the fact is that both
sexes of the glow-worm are phosphorescent, not only in the perfect
insect, but also in the larva and even pupa state. — ED.
* *»&G the story ofllc.ro and Leander. — G. \V.
OF SELBORNE. 85
LETTER XXV.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Aug. 30, 1769.
T gives me satisfaction to find that my account
of the ousel migration pleases you. You
put a very shrewd question when you ask
me how I know that their autumnal migra-
tion is southward ? Were not candour and
openness the very life of natural history, I should pass over
this query just as a sly commentator does over a crabbed
passage in a classic; but common ingenuousness obliges
me to' confess, not without some degree of shame, that
I only reasoned in that case from analogy. For as all other
autumnal birds migrate from the northward to us, to par-
take of our milder winters, and return to the northward
again when the rigorous cold abates, so I concluded that
the ring-ousels did the same, as well as their congeners the
fieldfares; and especially as ring-ousels are known to haunt
cold mountainous countries : but I have good reason to
suspect since, that they may come to us from the west-
ward; because I hear, from very good authority, that they
breed on Dartmoor; and that they forsake that wild dis-
trict about the time that our visitors appear, and do not
return till late in the spring.
I have taken a great deal of pains about your Salicaria
and mine, with a white stroke over its eye and a tawny
rump. I have surveyed it alive and dead, and have pro-
cured several specimens; and am perfectly persuaded my-
self, (and trust you will soon be convinced of the same) that
it is no more nor less than the Passer arundinaceus minor of
Ray. This bird, by some means or other, seems to be
entirely omitted in the ( ' British Zoology ; " and one reason
probably was because it is so strangely classed in Ray, who
ranges it among his Picis affincs. It ought no doubt to
have gone among his Aviculce caudd unicolore, and among
86 NATURAL HISTORY
your slender-billed small birds of the same division. Lin-
naeus might with great propriety have put it into his genus
of Motacilla ; and the Motacilla salicaria of his Fauna
Suecica seems to come the nearest to it. It is no uncommon
bird, haunting the sides of ponds and rivers where there
is covert, and the reeds and sedges of moors. The country
people in some places call it the sedge bird.1 It sings
incessantly night and day during the breeding time, imi-
tating the note of a sparrow, a swallow, a skylark ; and has
a strange hurrying manner in its song. My specimens
correspond most minutely to the description of your fen
salicaria shot near Revesby. Mr. Ray has given an excel-
lent characteristic of it when he says, " Rostrum et pedes in
Jtdc aviculd multb majores sunt qiCam pro corporis ratione."
See Letter, May 29, 1769.
I have got you the egg of an (Edicnemus, or stone-
curlew, which was picked up in a fallow on the naked
ground : there were two ; but the finder inadvertently
crushed one with his foot before he saw them.
"When I wrote to you last year on reptiles, I wish I had
not forgot to mention the faculty that snakes have of stinking
se defendendo. I knew a gentleman who kept a tame snake,
which was in its person as sweet as any animal while in
good humour and unalarmed ; but as soon as a stranger, or
a dog or cat, came in, it fell to hissing, and filled the room
with such nauseous effluvia as rendered it hardly support-
able. Thus the squnck, or stonck, of Ray's " Synopsis
Quadrupedum" is an innocuous and sweet animal; but,
when pressed hard by dogs and men, it can eject such a
most pestilent and fetid smell and excrement that nothing
can be more horrible.
A gentleman sent me lately a fine specimen of the Lanius
minor cinerascens cum macula in scapulis all>a, RAii;2 which
is a bird that, at the time of your publishing your two first
volumes of " British Zoology/' I find you had not seen.
You have described it well from Edwards' s drawing.
1 Salicaria phragmitis, see note 2, p. 82. — ED.
2 The woodcliat, Lanius rvtilus, Latham. This is one of the earliest
British specimens noticed. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 87
LETTER XXVI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Dec. 8, 1769.
AS much gratified by your communicative
letter on your return from Scotland, where
you spent, I find, some considerable time,
and gave yourself good room to examine the
natural curiosities of that extensive king-
dom, both those of the islands, as well as those of the
highlands. The usual bane of such expeditions is hurry ;
because men seldom allot themselves half the time they
should do ; but, fixing on a day for their return, post from
place to place, rather as if they were on a journey that
required dispatch, than as philosophers investigating the
works of nature. You must have made, no doubt, many
discoveries, and laid up a good fund of materials for a future
edition of the " British Zoology;" and will have no reason
to repent that you have bestowed so much pains on a part
of Great Britain that perhaps was never so well examined
before.
It has always been matter of wonder to me that field-
fares, which are so congenerous to thrushes and blackbirds,
should never choose to breed in England : but that they
should not think even the highlands cold and northerly, and
sequestered enough, is a circumstance still more strange
and wonderful. The ring-ousel, you find, stays in Scot-
land the whole year round ; so that we have reason to con-
clude that those migrators that visit us for a short space
every autumn do not come from thence.
And here, I think, will be the proper place to mention
that those birds were most punctual again in their migra-
tion this autumn, appearing, as before, about the 30th of
September : but their flocks were larger than common, and
88 NATURAL HISTORY
their stay protracted somewhat beyond the usual time. If
they came to spend the whole winter with us, as some of
their congeners do, and then left us, as they do, in spring,
I should not be so much struck with the occurrence, since
it would be similar to that of the other winter birds of pas-
sage; but when I see them for a fortnight at Michael-
mas, and again for about a week in the middle of April,
I am seized with wonder, and long to be informed whence
these travellers come, and whither they go, since they seem
to use our hills merely as an inn or baiting place.
Your account of the greater brambling, or snow-fleck, is
very amusing ; and strange it is, that such a short-winged
bird should delight in such perilous voyages over the
northern ocean ! Some country people in the winter
time have every now and then told me that they have seen
two or three white larks on our downs ; but, on considering
the matter, I begin to suspect that these are some stragglers
of the birds we are talking of, which sometimes perhaps
may rove so far to the southward.
It pleases me to find that white hares are so frequent on
the Scottish mountains, and especially as you inform me
that it is a distinct species ; for the quadrupeds of Britain
are so few, that every new species is a great acquisition.
The eagle-owl, could it be proved to belong to us, is so
majestic a bird, that it would grace our Fauna much.1
I never was informed before where wild geese are known
to breed.
You admit, I find, that I have proved your fen salicaria
to be the lesser reed sparrow of Ray:2 and I think you may
be secure that I am right ; for I took very particular pains to
clear up that matter, and had some fair specimens ; but, as
they were not well preserved, they are decayed already.
You will, no doubt, insert it in its proper place in your next
edition. Your additional plates will much improve your
work.
1 In the " Handbook of British Birds" (1872), pp. 94, 95, will be
found enumerated at least a dozen instances of its occurrence iu
different parts of the British islands. — ED.
2 See p. 82, note 2, and p. 86, note 1. — ED.
OF SELBOENE.
89
De Buffon, I know, has described the water shrew-mouse :
but still I am pleased to find you have discovered it in Lin-
colnshire, for the reason I have given in the article of the
white hare.
THE EAGLE OWL.
As a neighbour was lately ploughing in a dry chalky field,
far removed from any water, he turned out a water-rat, that
was curiously laid up in an hybernaculum artificially formed
of grass and leaves. At one end of the burrow lay above a
gallon of potatoes regularly stowed, on which it was to have
supported itself for the winter. But the difficulty with me
is how this amphilrius mus came to fix its winter station at
such a distance from the water. Was it determined in its
choice of that place by the mere accident of finding the
potatoes which were planted there ; or is it the constant
practice of the aquatic rat to forsake the neighbourhood of
the water in the colder months ?
90 NATURAL HISTORY
Though I delight very little in analogous reasoning,
knowing how fallacious it is with respect to natural history ;
yet, in the following instance, I cannot help being inclined
to think it may conduce towards the explanation of a diffi-
culty that I have mentioned before, with respect to the
invariable early retreat of the Hirundo apus, or swift, so
many weeks before its congeners ; and that not only with
us, but also in Andalusia, where they also begin to retire
about the beginning of August.
The great large bat1 (which by the by is at present a
nondescript in England, and what I have never been able
yet to procure) retires or migrates very early in the summer ;
it also ranges very high for its food, feeding in a different
region of the air ; and that is the reason I never could
procure one. Now this is exactly the case with the swifts ;
for they take their food in a more exalted region than the
other species, and are very seldom seen hawking for flies
near the ground, or over the surface of the water. From
hence I would conclude that these Hirundines, and the larger
bats, are supported by some sorts of highflying gnats,
scarabs, or Phalcence, that are of short continuance; and
that the short stay of these strangers is regulated by the
defect of their food.
By my journal it appears that curlews2 clamoured on to
October the thirty-first : since which I have not seen or
heard any. Swallows were observed on to November the
third.
1 The little bat appears almost every month in the year; but I have
never seen the large ones till the end of April, nor after July. They
are most common in June, but never in any plenty ; are a rare species
with us.— G. W.
2 Stone-curlews, (Edicncmus crcpitans. The true curlew, Numenius
arcuutus. was not observed at Selborne. — ED.
SELBORNE.
91
LETTER XXVII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Feb. 22, 1770.
EDGEHOGS abound in my gardens and
fields. The manner in which they eat the
roots of the plantain in my grass walks is
very curious : with their upper mandible,
which is much longer than their lower, they
bore under the plant, and so eat the root off upwards,
leaving the tuft of leaves untouched. In this respect
HEDGEHOG.
they are serviceable, as they destroy a very troublesome
weed ; but they deface the walks in some measure by
digging little round holes.1 It appears, by the dung that
1 The author of the " Letters of Rusticus " discovered this to be a
mistake. He found that it was not the hedgehog but a night-eating
caterpillar. He says : — " In a grass walk I saw some flattened plants
of the common plantain withering and half dead ; by the side of each
I found the hole bored, as White supposed, by the long upper mandible
of * Hoggy,' but it was scarcely big enough to admit a lead pencil, and
92 NATURAL HISTORY
they drop upoii the turf, that beetles are no inconsiderable
part of their food. In June last I procured a litter of four
or five young hedgehogs, which appeared to be about five or
six days old : they, I find, like puppies, are born blind, and
could not see when they came to my hands. No doubt their
spines are soft and flexible at the time of their birth, or
else the poor dam would have but a bad time of it in the
critical moment of parturition : but it is plain that they
soon harden ; for these little pigs had such stiff prickles on
their backs and sides as would easily have fetched blood,
had they not been handled with caution. Their spines are
quite white at this age ; and they have little hanging ears,
which I do not remember to be discernible in the old ones.
They can, in part, at this age draw their skin down over
their faces ; but are not able to contract themselves into a
ball, as they do, for the sake of defence, when full grown.
The reason, I suppose, is, because the curious muscle that
enables the creature to roll itself up in a ball was not then
arrived at its full tone and firmness. Hedgehogs make a
deep and warm hybernaculum with leaves and moss, in which
they conceal themselves for the winter: but I never could
find that they stored in any winter provision, as some qua-
drupeds certainly do.
I have discovered an anecdote with respect to the field-
fare (Turdus pilaris), which I think is particular enough:
this bird, though it sits on trees in the daytime, and pro-
cures the greatest part of its food from whitethorn hedges;
yea, moreover, builds on very high trees, as may be seen by
the Fauna Suecica ; yet always appears with us to roost on
the ground. They are seen to come in flocks just before it
is dark, and to settle and nestle among the heath on our
forest. And besides, the larkers, in dragging their nets by
night, frequently catch them, in the wheat-stubbles ; while
the bat-fowlers, who take many redwings in the hedges,
?o round and smooth tliat I said directly to myself, ''tis the burrow of
a night-eating caterpillar.' I got a trowel and in a trice the fellow was
unearthed; and he afterwards turned to a 'ghost moth' or 'yellow
under wing,' I cannot say which, for both came out in one cage." — ED
OF SELBORNE. 93
never entangle any of this species. Why these birds, in
the matter of roosting, should differ from all their con-
geners, and from themselves also with respect to their pro-
ceedings by day, is a fact for which I am by no means able
to account.
I have somewhat to inform you of concerning the moose
deer; but in general foreign animals fall seldom in my
way : my little intelligence is confined to the narrow sphere
of my own observations at home.
LETTER XXVIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, March, 1770.
N Michaelmas-day, 1768, I managed to get a
sight of the female moose belonging to the
Duke of Richmond, at Goodwood ; but was
greatly disappointed, when I arrived at the
spot, to find that it died, after having ap-
peared in a languishing way for some time, on the morning
before. However, understanding that it was not stripped,
I proceeded to examine this rare quadruped. I found it in
an old green-house, slung under the belly and chin by ropes,
and in a standing posture ; but though it had been dead for
so short a time, it was in so putrid a state that the stench
was hardly supportable. The grand distinction between
this deer, and any other species that I have ever met with,
consisted in the strange length of its legs, on which it was
tilted up much in the manner of the birds of the Grallce
order. I measured it, as they do a horse, and found that,
from the ground to the wither, it was just five feet four
inches ; which height answers exactly to sixteen hands, a
growth that few horses arrive at : but then, with this length
of legs, its neck was remarkably short, no more than twelve
inches ; so that, by straddling with one foot forward, and the
94 NATURAL HISTORY
other backward, it grazed on the plain ground, with the
greatest difficulty, between its legs ; the ears were vast and
lopping, and as long as the neck ; the head was about twenty
inches long and ass-like, and had such a redundancy of
upper lip as I never saw before, with huge nostrils. This
lip, travellers say, is esteemed a dainty dish in North Ame-
rica. It is very reasonable to suppose that this creature sup-
ports itself chiefly by browsing of trees, and by wading after
water plants ; towards which way of livelihood the length of
legs and great lip must contribute much. I have read some-
where that it delights in eating the Nymphceat or water-lily.
From the fore feet to the belly behind the shoulder it
measured three feet and eight inches : the length of the legs
before and behind consisted a great deal in the tibia, which
was strangely long ; but, in my haste to get out of the
stench, I forgot to measure that joint exactly. Its scut
seemed to be about an inch long ; the colour was a grizzly
black ; the mane about four inches long ; the fore hoofs were
upright and shapely, the hind flat and splayed. The spring
before it was only two years old, so that most probably it
was not then come to its growth. What a vast tall beast
must a full grown stag be ! I have been told some arrive at
ten and a-half feet ! This poor creature had at first a female
companion of the same species, which died the spring before.
In the same garden was a young stag, or red deer, between
whom and this moose it was hoped that there might have
been a breed ; but their inequality of height must have
always been a bar to this.1 I should have been glad to
have examined the teeth, tongue, lips, hoofs, &c. minutely ;
but the putrefaction precluded all farther curiosity. This
animal, the keeper told me, seemed to enjoy itself best in
the extreme frost of the former winter. In the house they
showed me the horn of a male moose, which had no front
antlers, but only a broad palm, with some snags on the edge.
1 They belong, moreover, to very distinct genera of the Cervida. In
addition to the peculiarities of form described by Gilbert White, the
moose has broadly palmated horns instead of a rounded stem and antlers
as in the red deer. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 9o
The noble owner of the dead moose proposed to make
a skeleton of her bones.
Please to let me hear if my female moose corresponds
with that you saw ; and whether you think still that the
American moose and European elk are the same creature.
LETTER XXIX.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, May 12, 1770.
AST month we had such a series of cold
turbulent weather, such a constant succession
of frost, and snow, and hail, and tempest,
that the regular migration or appearance of
the summer birds was much interrupted.
Some did not show themselves (at least were not heard) till
weeks after their usual time, as the blackcap and white-
throat ; and some have not been heard yet, as the grass-
hopper lark and largest willow wren.1 As to the flycatcher,
I have not seen it : it is indeed one of the latest, but should
appear about this time: and yet, amidst all this meteorous
strife and war of the elements, two swallows discovered
themselves as long ago as the llth of April, in frost and
snow ; but they withdrew quickly, and were not visible
again for many days. House martins, which are always
more backward than swallows, were not observed till May
came in.
Among the monogamous birds several are to be found,
after pairing-time, single, and of each sex : but whether
this state of celibacy is matter of choice or necessity, is not
so easily discoverable. When the house sparrows deprive
my martins of their nests, as soon as I cause one to be shot,
the other, be it cock or hen, presently procures a mate, and
so for several times following.
1 The wood wren, Ph. sibilatrix. See note, p. 5G. — ED.
9(5 NATURAL HISTORY
I have known a dove-house infested by a pair of white
owls, which made great havoc among the young pigeons.
One of the owls was shot as soon as possible ; but the
survivor readily found a mate, and the mischief went on.
After some time the new pair were both destroyed, and the
annoyance ceased.1
Another instance I remember of a sportsman, whose zeal
for the increase of his game being greater than his humanity,
after pairing- time he always shot the cock bird of every
couple of partridges upon his grounds, supposing that the
rivalry of many males interrupted the breed: he used to
say, that, though he had widowed the same hen several
times, yet he found she was still provided with a fresh
paramour, that did not take her away from her usual
haunt.
Again : I knew a lover of setting, an old sportsman, who
has often told me that soon after harvest he has frequently
taken small coveys of partridges, consisting of cock birds
alone ; these he pleasantly used to call old bachelors.
There is a propensity belonging to common house cats
that is very remarkable ; I mean their violent fondness for
fish, which appears to be their most favourite food. And
yet nature in this instance seems to have planted in them
an appetite that, unassisted, they know not how to gratify;
for of all quadrupeds, cats are the least disposed towards
1 This is contrary to the experience of the late Charles Waterton,
who, in his " Essays in Natural History," 1st series, p. 14, says : —
" When fanners complain that the barn owl destroys the eggs of their
pigeons they lay the saddle on the wrong horse. They ought to put it
on the rat. Formerly I could get very few young pigeons till the rats
were excluded effectually from the dove cot. Since that took place it
has produced a great abundance every year, though the barn owls
frequent it, and are encouraged all around it. The barn owl merely
resorts to it for repose and concealment. If it were really an enemy
to the dove cot we should see the pigeons in commotion as soon as it
begins its evening flight ! but the pigeons heed it not ; whereas if tho
sparrow hawk or hobby should make its appearance, the whole com-
munity would be up at once ; proof sufficient that the barn owl is not
looked upon as a bad, or even a suspicious character by the inhabitants
of the dove cot." — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 97
water, and will not, when they can avoid it, deign to wet a
foot, much less to plunge into that element.
THE OTTER.
Quadrupeds that prey on fish are amphibious. Such is
the otter, which by nature is so well formed for diving that
it makes great havoc among the inhabitants of the waters.
Not supposing that we had any of those beasts in our
shallow brooks, I was much pleas 3d to see a male otter
brought to me, weighing twenty- one pounds, that had
been shot on the bank of our stream below the Priory,
where the rivulot divides the parish of Selborne from
Harteley Wood.1
1 It is generally supposed that otters live exclusively on fish, but
such is not invariably the case. They are carnivorous as well as
piscivorous, and have been known to eat ducks and teal, and, while in
confinement, young pigeons. Frogs form part of their bill of fare, and
even mussels at times furnish food to these animals. Numbers of
mussel-shells have been found in an otter's haunt, with the ends bitten
off, and evident marks of teeth upon the broken fragments, the position
of the shells indicating that the otter, after having crunched off one
end, had sucked or scooped out the mollusc, in much the same way
as those who are partial to shrimps dispose of that esculent crus-
tacean.— ED.
NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XXX.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIEE.
SELBOENF, AU?. 1, 1770.
HE French, I think, in general are strangely
prolix in their natural history. What Lin-
naeus says with respect to insects, holds
good in every other branch : " Vcrlositas
prcescntis sceculi, calamitas artis."
Pray how do you approve of Scopoli's new work? As I
admire his " Entomologia," I long to see it.
I forgot to mention in my last letter (and had not room
to insert in the former) that the male moose, in rutting
time, swims from island to island, in the lakes and rivers of
North America, in pursuit of the females. My friend, the
chaplain, saw one killed in the water as it was on that errand
in the river St. Lawrence. It was a monstrous beast, he
told me ; but he did not take the dimensions.
When I was last in town, our friend Mr. Barrington
most obligingly carried me to see many curious sights.
As you were then writing to him about horns, he carried
me to see many strange and wonderful specimens. There
is, I remember, at Lord Pembroke's, at Wilton, a horn
room furnished with more than thirty different pairs; but I
have not sscn that house lately.
Mr. Barrington showed me many astonishing collections
of stuffed and living birds from all quarters of the world.
After I had studied over the latter for a time, I remarked
that every species almost that came from distant regions,
such as South America, the coast of Guinea, &c., were thick-
billed birds of the Loxia and Fringilla genera, and no
Motacilice or fifuscicapce were to be met with. When I
came to consider, the reason was obvious enough ; for the
hard-billed birds subsist on seeds which are easily carried
on board ; whilst the soft-billed birds, which are supported
OF SELBORNE. 99
by worms and insects, or, what is a succedaneum for them,
fresh raw meat, can meet with neither in long and tedious
voyages. It is from this defect of food that our collections
(curious as they are) are defective, and we are deprived of
some of the most delicate and lovely genera. l
LETTER XXXI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Sept. 14, 1770.
OU saw, I find, the ring-ousels again among
their native crags ; and are farther assured
that they continue resident in those cold
regions the whole year.2 From whence
then do our ring-ousels migrate so regu-
larly every September, and make their appearance again,
as if in their return, every April ? They are more early
this year than common, for some were seen at the usual hill
on the fourth of this month.
An observing Devonshire gentleman tells me that they
frequent some parts of Dartmoor, and breed there ; but leave
those haunts about the end of September or beginning of
October, and return again about the end of March.
1 Since the foregoing remarks were penned, not only have the means
of transport become much more rapid than was the case in WThite's
day, but greater attention having been paid to the importation of foreign
birds and animals, and more consideration given to their food, enter-
prising individuals have succeeded in bringing alive and well to this
country many more delicate species than those referred to by our
author, and from much greater distances. If he regretted the inability
in 1770 to procure a soft-billed bird from the coast of Guinea, how would
he have marvelled to see alive in the Zoological Society's Gardens at
the present day the insectivorous Australian Pied Grallina, Grallina
australis, the Black-tailed Flower-bird, Anthornis melanura, from New
Zealand, and the Wood swallow, Artamus super ciliosus, from New South
Wales.— ED.
2 From our present knowledge of the habits of the ring-ousel, we
may infer with little doubt that Pennant's informant must have con-
founded the dipper or water- ousel with the ring-ousel. — ED.
100 NATURAL HISTORY
Another intelligent person assures me that they breed in
great abundance all over the Peak of Derby, and are called
there Tor-ousels ; withdraw in October and November, and
return in spring. This information seems to throw some
light on my new migration.
Scopoli's new work 1 (which I have just procured) has its
merit in ascertaining many of the birds of the Tyrol and
Carniola. Monographers, come from whence they may,
have, I think, fair pretence to challenge some regard and
approbation from the lovers of natural history ; for, as no
man can alone investigate all the works of nature, these
partial writers may, each in their department, be more
accurate in their discoveries, and freer from errors, than
more general writers ; and so by degrees may pave the
way to a universal correct natural history. Not that Scopoli
is so circumstantial and attentive to the life and conversa-
tion of his birds as I could wish : he advances some false
facts ; as when he says of the Hirundo urbica that " pullos
extra nidum non nutrit." This assertion I know to be
wrong from repeated observation this summer; for house
martins do feed their young flying, though it must be
acknowledged not so commonly as the house swallow ; and
the feat is done in so quick a manner as not to be per-
ceptible to indifferent observers. He also advances some
(I was going to say) improbable facts ; as when he says of
the woodcock that "pullos rostro portat fugiens ab hoste."
But candour forbids me to say absolutely that any fact is
false, because I have never been witness to such a fact.
I have only to remark that the long unwieldy bill of the
woodcock is perhaps the worst adapted of any among the
winged creation for such a feat of natural affection.2
1 " Amrns Primus Historico-Naturalis." — G. W.
2 The fact that woodcocks carry their young has long been known to
naturalists. Several instances are referred to by Yarrell in the third
volume of his " History of British Birds." Others are recorded by
Mr. Lloyd in his " Scandinavian Adventures" and ** Game Birds and
Wild Fowl of Sweden and Norway," in which latter work will be found
a woodcut (p. 194) illustrating a case witnessed by a friend of the
author. Mr. St. John, in his " Natural History and Sport in Morav."
OF SELBOENE. 101
p. 211, has some interesting remarks on this subject from his own obser-
vation. He says: " That the old birds carried their young I had long
since ascertained, having often seen them in the months of April and
May in the act of doing so, as they flew, towards nightfall, from the
woods down to the swamps in the low grounds. From close observa-
tion, however, I found out that the old woodcock carries her young even
when larger than a snipe, not in her claws, which seem quite inca-
pable of holding up any weight, but by clasping the little bird tightly
between her thighs, and so holding it tight towards her own body. In
the summer and spring evenings the woodcocks may be seen so employed
passing to and fro, and uttering a gentle cry on their way from the
woods to the marshes. They not only carry their young to feed, but
also, if the brood is suddenly come upon in the daytime, the old bird lifts
up one of her young, flies with it fifty or sixty yards, drops it quietly,
and flies silently on. The little bird immediately rnns a few yards,
and then squats flat on the ground amongst the dead leaves, or what-
ever the ground is covered with. The parent soon returns to the rest
of her brood, and if the danger still threatens her, she lifts up and car-
ries away another young bird in the same manner. I saw this take
place on the 18th of May." This is confirmed by a correspondent who,
writing from Rostrevor, Co. Down, in August, 1871, says : " On the 2nd
of this month I started a brace of woodcocks close to me. One of them
had a young one pressed between its breast and feet; it lighted on the
ground again after rising, apparently to get a better grasp of its young
one, and then flew off with it. They were near the edge of a wood, in
the afternoon and during sunshine." Another correspondent, writing
from Rohallion, Birnam, in "The Field" of 26th August, 1871, says:
" This spring (1871) I have been witness repeatedly to the ability of
the woodcock to carry its young and fly off with them pressed to its
body by its legs. This was in May and June." Some additional
evidence will be found in Mr. Stevenson's " Birds of Norfolk," vol. ii.
p. 292.
This curious habit has been noticed also in the North American
woodcock, as testified by Audubon and others, while more recently the
same thing has been observed in England of the common snipe. A
well-known sportsman, who has adopted the pseudonym of " Idstone,"
writing in " The Field" of 30th May, 1874, says that, on the 22nd of
the same month, when crossing a marsh on his way to a trout stream, a
snipe rose almost at his feet, "and there was attached to it, mostly on
its left or near side, a young snipe which it carried, or which clung to it,
for about twenty-five yards." He could distinctly see the markings on
the young one, and is therefore positive that he was not mistaken. The
locality was close to Lawrence's Mill, Morden, Dorsetshire.
In the same number of " The Field," Mr. John Titterton, of Ely,
Cambs., says that a similar thing was observed near Ely also in May of
the same year. — ED.
102 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XXXII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Oct. 29, 1770.
FTER an ineffectual search in Linnaeus, Bris-,
son, &c., I begin to suspect that I discern my
brother's Hirundo hyberna in Scopoli's new
discovered Hirundo rupestris, p. 167. His
description of f< Supra murina, subtus albida;
rectrices macula- ovali alba in latere interno ; pedes nudi,
nigri ; rostrum nigrum; remiges obscuriores quam plumce
dor sales ; rectrices remigibus concolorcs ; cauda emarginata
necforcipata;" agrees very well with the bird in question;
but when he comes to advance that it is " statura Hirun-
dinis urbicce," and that " definikio Hirundinis riparice Linncei
huic quoque convenit" he in some measure invalidates all he
has said ; at least he shows at once that he compares them
to these species merely from memory : for I have compared
the birds themselves, and find they differ widely in every
circumstance of shape, size and colour. However, as you
will have a specimen, I shall be glad to hear what your
judgment is in the matter.1
Whether my brother is forestalled in his nondescript or
not, he will have the credit of first discovering that they spend
their winters under the warm and sheltery shores of Gib-
raltar and Barbary.2
1 It seems highly probable that Gilbert White's suspicion of the
identity of his brother's Gibraltar swallow with the Hirundo rupestris
was correct ; indeed, if the Gibraltar bird exhibited a white spot on the
inner web of each of the tail feathers (except the two intermediate
ones), it could have been no other than the bird first characterized by
Scopoli, in his " Annus Primus," under the name quoted. According to
M. Temminck the rock swallow is abundant along the shores of the
Mediterranean. — ED.
2 " This remark," says Mr. Bennett, " is not to be understood as
miting the residence of the rock swallow at Gibraltar to the winter
OF SELBORNE. 103
Scopoli's characters of his ordines and genera are clear,
just, and expressive, and much in the spirit of Linnaeus.
These few remarks are the result of my first perusal of
Scopoli's ft Annus Primus."
The bane of our science is the comparing one animal to
the other by memory : for want of caution in this particular
Scopoli falls into errors : he is not so full with regard to
the manners of his indigenous birds as might be wished, as
you justly observe : his Latin is easy, elegant, and ex-
pressive, and very superior to Kramer's.1
I am pleased to see that my description of the moose
corresponds so well with yours.
LETTER XXXIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Nov 26, 1770.
WAS much Pleased to see> among the col-
lection of birds from Gibraltar, some of those
short- wingedEnglish summer birds of passage,
concerning whose departure we have made so
much inquiry. Now, if these birds are found
in Andalusia to migrate to and from Barbary, it may easily be
supposed that those that come to us may migrate back to
the continent, and spend their winters in some of the
warmer parts of Europe. This is certain, that many soft-
billed birds that come to Gibraltar appear there only in
spring and autumn, seeming to advance in pairs towards
the northward, for the sake of breeding during the summer
cnly ; but merely as indicating that it does not quit the neighbourhood
of that place, like the other swallows, during the colder months. It is,
in fact, stationary throughout the year." M. Risso states it to be
stationary also in the more northern locality of Nice ; where all the
other swallows are, as in England, birds of passage. — ED.
1 See his " Elenchus vegotabilium et animalium per Austriam in-
feriorem," &c.— G. W.
104 NATURAL HISTORY
months ; and retiring in parties and broods towards the south
at the decline of the year : so that the rock of Gibraltar is
the great rendezvous, and place of observation, from whence
they take their departure each way towards Europe or Africa.
It is therefore no mean discovery, I think, to find that our
small short-winged summer birds of passage are to be seen
spring and autumn on the very skirts of Europe; it is a
presumptive proof of their emigrations.
Scopoli seems to me to have found the Hirundo mclba,1
the great Gibraltar swift, in Tyrol, without knowing it.
For what is his Hirundo alpina but the afore-mentioned
bird in other words ? Says he, " Omnia prioris" (meaning
the swift) ; " sed pectus album; paulo major priore" I do
not suppose this to be a new species. It is true also of
melba, that " nidificat in excelsis Alpium rupibus," Vid.
Annum Primiun.
My Sussex friend, a man of observation and good sense,
but no naturalist, to whom I applied on account of the stone
curlew (CEdicnemus) , sends me the following account: aln
looking over my Naturalist's Journal for the month of April,
I find the stone curlews are first mentioned on the 17th and
18th, which date seems to me rather late. They live with
us all the spring and summer, and at the beginning of
autumn prepare to take leave by getting together in flocks.
They seem to me a bird of passage that may travel into
some dry hilly country south of us, probably Spain, because
of the abundance of sheep-walks in that country ; for they
spend their summers with us in such districts. This con-
jecture I hazard, as I have never met with any one that has
seen them in England in the winter.2 I believe they are
1 Cypselus mclba, ILL. (Cyps. alpinus, TEMM.) Stragglers of thii
species, the large white-bellied swift, have occurred, in several instances,
in the British islands. A score of such instances will be found enume-
rated in the "Handbook of British Birds,1' pp. 125, 126. — ED.
2 One of the most interesting facts in connection with Cornish ornith-
ology is that the stone curlew, which is usually met with in other parts
of England as a summer visitant, is never seen in the Lizard and Land's
End districts except in winter, and in the opinion of Mr. Rodd (" List
Brit. Birds," 2nd ed. 1860, p. 5) the only way to account for this dcvia-
OF SELBORNE. 105
not fond of going near the water, but feed on earth-worms,
that are common on sheep-walks and downs. They breed on
fallows and lay-fields abounding with gray mossy flints,
which much resemble their young in colour; among which
they skulk and conceal themselves. They make no nest,
but lay their eggs on the bare ground, producing in com-
mon but two at a time. There is reason to think their
young run soon after they are hatched ; and that the old
ones do not feed them, but only lead them about at the
STONE CURLEW.
time of feeding, which, for the most part, is in the night."
Thus far my friend.
In the manners of this bird you see there is something
very analogous to the bustard, whom it also somewhat
resembles in aspect and make, and in the structure of its
feet.
tion is to presume that a portion of the migratory party, in their southern
flight in the autumn, hold a northern limit just reaching the Land's End
and the Lizard lands (the most southern in the British isles), the eorre*
sponding northern migration in the spring just taking the whole number
above the southern latitudes of the extreme western counties — ED-
10G NATURAL HISTORY
For a long time I have desired my relation to look out
for these birds in Andalusia; and now he writes me word
that, for the first time, he saw one dead in the market on
the 3rd of September.1
When the (Edicnemus flies it stretches out its legs
straight behind, like a heron.
LETTER XXXIV.
TO THOMAS PESNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBOENE, March 30, 1771.
f/Tra E=Si? HERB is an insect with us, especially on
chalky districts, which is very troublesome
and teasing all the latter end of the summer,
getting into people's skins, especially those
of women and children, and raising tumours
which itch intolerably. This animal (which we call a har-
vest bug) is very minute, scarce discernible to the naked
eye, of a bright scarlet colour, and of the genus of Acarus.
They are to be met with in gardens on kidney beans, or any
legumens, but prevail only in the hot months of summer.
Warreners, as some have assured me, are much infested by
them on chalky downs ; where these insects swarm some-
times to so infinite a degree as to discolour their nets, and
to give them a reddish cast, while the men are so bitten as
to be thrown into fevers.
There is a small long shining fly in these parts very
troublesome to the housewife by getting into the chimneys
and laying its eggs in the bacon while it is drying. These
eggs produce maggots called jumpers, which, harbouring in
the gammons and best parts of the hogs, eat down to the
1 Mr. Howard Saunders, in his " List of the Birds of Southern Spain"
(Ibis, 1871, p. 386), includes the stone curlew as " common and resident,
frequenting dry watercourses, and the most arid plains, where it deposits
its eggs." — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 107
bone and make great waste. This fly I suspect to be a
variety of the Musca putris of Linnaeus. It is to be seen in
the summer in farm-kitchens on the bacon-racks, and about
the mantlepieces and on the ceilings.
The insect that infests turnips and many crops in the
garden (destroying often whole fields while in their seedling
leaves) is an animal that wants to be better known. The
country people here call it the turnip-fly and black dolphin,
but I know it to be one of the Coleoptera; the " Clirysomela
oleracea, saltatoria, femoribus posticis crassissimis" In
very hot summers they abound to an amazing degree, and
as you walk in a field or in a garden, make a pattering like
rain by jumping on the leaves of the turnips or cabbages.1
There is an CEstrus t known in these parts to every plough-
boy ; which, because it is omitted by Linnaeus, is also passed
over by late writers, and that is the curvicauda of old
Mouflet, mentioned by Derham in his " Physico-Theology,"
p. 250, an insect worthy of remark for depositing its eggs
as it flies in so dexterous a manner on the single hairs of
the legs and flanks of grass horses.2 But then Derham is
1 On the subject of the Turnip-fly the reader may be referred to the
" Letters of Rusticus," pp. 91-108, and to an excellent account pub-
lished by Mr. Edward Newman in the " Field" of Nov. 20, 1869.
Against the attacks of the black caterpillar, or " black dolphin," as
White terms it, no preventive has yet been suggested. The most
effectual means of keeping it under is by freely sprinkling the infested
fields with lime, and renewing the sprinkling as often as the fine powder
may happen to be carried a\vay by the wind. The same process
appears also to have been the most successful that has yet been resorted
to against the attacks of the ordinary turnip-fly. It is strongly recom-
mended in a report which was published in 1834 by the Doncaster
Agricultural Society, as the result of a very extensive correspondence,
instituted with the especial view of collecting, from all parts of England,
information on a subject of so much importance to the agriculturist. —
ED.
2 Gilbert White was mistaken in supposing that Linnaeus had over-
looked this insect. He described it both in the " Fauna Suecica " and
in his " Systema," under the name of CEstrus bovis, but the habitats
which he assigned to it, namely, the stomach of the horse and the back
of kine, show that he confounded together two distinct insects, the
maggots of which infest the several situations referred to by him. The
maggots of the one, known by the names of wormals or warbles, and
108 NATURAL HISTORY
mistaken when lie advances that this (Estrus is the parent
of that wonderful star- tailed maggot which he mentions
afterwards ; for more modern entomologists have discovered
sometimes by that of bots, are found beneath the skin of cattle : these
are the larvae of the true (Estrus bovis, the perfect fly of which was
probably unknown to the great Swedish naturalist. The maggots of
the other, known, in common with those of some other species, by the
name of bots, are found with the larvae of those other bot-flies in the
stomachs of horses. The one whose habits are described by White,
may be called the spotted- winged bot-fly.
Mr. Bracy Clark, who has well described the habits of these insects
in his " Observations on the Genus (Estrus," published in the third volume
of the " Linnean Society's Transactions," and subsequently in an " Essay
on the Bots of Horses," says : " The female bot-fly approaching a horse
on the wing, holds her body nearly upright in the air, and her tail,
which is lengthened for the' purpose, curved inwards and upwards : in
this way she approaches the part where she designs to deposit the egg ;
and suspending herself for a few seconds before it, suddenly darts upon
it, and leaves the egg adhering to the hair : she hardly appears to settle,
but merely touches the hair with the egg held out on the projected point
of the abdomen. The egg is made to adhere by means of a glutinous
liquor secreted with it. She then leaves the horse at a small distance,
and prepares a second egg, and, poising herself before the part, deposits
it in the same way. The liquor dries, and the egg becomes firmly glued
to the hair : this is repeated by various flies, till four or five hundred
eggs are sometimes placed on one horse.
" The inside of the knee is the part on which these flies are most fond
of depositing their eggs, and next to this on the side and back part of
the shoulder, and less frequently on the extreme ends of the hairs of the
mane. But it is a fact worthy of attention, that the fly does not place
them promiscuously about the body, but constantly on those parts which
are most liable to be licked with the tongue ; and the ova therefore are
always scrupulously placed within its reach. Whether this be an act of
reason or of instinct, it is certainly a very remarkable one." Mr. Bracy
Clark suspects, with Dr. Darwin, it cannot be the latter, as that ought
to direct the performance of any act in one way only.
The eggs thus deposited are not, in Mr. Bracy Clark's opinion, re-
moved from the hairs by the moisture of the horse's tongue, aided by its
roughness, in the act of licking, and thus conveyed to the stomach : but
remain, he conceives, attached to the hairs for four or five days until
they have become "ripe, after which time the slightest application of
warmth and moisture is sufficient to bring forth in an instant the latent
larva. At this time, if the tongue of the horse touches the egg, its
operculuni is thrown open, and a small active worm is produced, which
readily adheres to the moist surface of the tongue, and is from thence
conveyed into the stomach." For the manner in which the larva affixes
OF SBLBOBNEll 109
that singular production to be derived from the egg of the
Musca chamceleon :l see Geoffrey, t. 17, f. 4.
A full history of noxious insects hurtful in the field,
garden, and house, suggesting all the known and likely
means of destroying them, would be allowed by the public
to be a most useful and important work.2 What knowledge
there is of this sort lies scattered, and wants to be collected ;
great improvements would soon follow of course. A know-
ledge of the properties, economy, propagation, and in short,
of the life and conversation of these animals, is a necessary
step to lead us to some method of preventing, their depre-
dations.
As far as I am a judge, nothing would recommend ento-
mology more than some neat plates that should well express
the generic distinctions of insects according to Linnaeus ;
itself in the stomach by means of the two hooks with which it is fur-
nished at its smaller extremity ; its mode of growth ; its detachment,
when fully grown, from the stomach; its passage through the intestines
to remain, during its pupa state, in some convenient spot of dang or
earth ; some anatomical particulars respecting it ; and many other facts
relating to the fly in its various stages, as well as to other species ; the reader
is referred to the paper in the " Linnean Society's Transactions," from
which the above extracts are taken. Interesting as they are, the ex-
planation of them would extend this note to too great a length, and
would carry it altogether away from the point to which it is chiefly
directed, — the admirable provision adverted to in the text for securing
for the bots the only habitation in which they could exist. — ED.
1 The singular larva of the Stratiomys chamceleon, DE GEER, has been
repeatedly figured and described ; and the use of the star-like circle of
fbathered hairs appended to its tail, as a means of suspending that part
and the orifice of the respiratory tube in their centre, has been often
explained : it is among the most beautiful as well as the most curious
contrivances resorted to for such a purpose by ever-varying Nature.
The eggs from which these larvae are produced are affixed by the parent
fly to plants living in the water in which the development of the mag-
got is to take place : those seen by Messrs. Kirby and Spence were
" arranged like tiles on a roof, one laid partly over another, on the under
side of the leaves of the water-plantain." — ED.
2 Since this observation was penned, the labours of Messrs. Kirby
and Spence, Curtis, Newman, and others have gone far to supply the
want alluded to, and have placed in the hands of students a store of
most valuable and interesting facts on the subject of entomology. — ED.
110
NATURAL HISTORY
for I am well assured that many people would study insects,
could they set out with a more adequate notion of those
distinctions than can be conveyed at first by words alone.
PEACOCK.-
OF SELBOENE. Ill
LETTER XXXY.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, 1771.
•LPPENING to make a visit to my neigh-
bour's peacocks, I could not help observing
that the trains of those magnificent birds
appear by no means to be their tails; those
long feathers growing not from their uropy-
i, but all up their backs.1 A range of short brown stiff
feathers, about six inches long, fixed in the uropygium, is
the real tail, and serves as the fulcrum to prop the train,
which is long and top-heavy, when set on end. When the
train is up, nothing appears of the bird before but its head
and neck ; but this would not be the case were those long
feathers fixed only in the rump, as may be seen by the
turkey-cock when in a strutting attitude. By a strong
muscular vibration these birds can make the shafts of their
long feathers clatter like the swords of a sword dancer ;
they then trample very quick with their feet, and run back-
wards towards the females.
I should tell you that I have got an uncommon calculus
agagropila, taken out of the stomach of a fat ox ; it is
perfectly round, and about the size of a large Seville orange ;
such are, I think, usually flat.
1 The peafowl is not the only bird in which the feathers of different
parts sometimes assume the appearance of a tail. Familiar instances
of this peculiarity are found in some of the cranes, notably in the Stanley
crane, and in the beautiful Trogon resplcndens of Central America.-
ED.
112
NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XXXVI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
Sept. 1771.
HE summer through I have seen but two of
that large species of bat which I call Vesper-
tilio altivolans1, from its manner of feeding
high in the air : I procured one of them, and
found it to be a male ; and made no doubt, as
they accompanied together, that the other was a female:
but, happening in an evening or two to procure the other
likewise, I was somewhat disappointed, when it appeared to
be also of the same sex. This circumstance, and the great
scarcity of this sort, at least in these parts, occasions some
suspicions in my mind whether it is really a species, or
whether it may not be the male part of the more known
species, one of which may supply many females ; as is
known to be the case in sheep, and some other quadrupeds.
But this doubt can only be cleared by a farther examination
and some attention to the sex, of more specimens. All that
I know at present is, that my two were amply furnished
with the parts of generation, much resembling those of a boar.
In the extent of their wings they measured fourteen
inches and a half; and four inches and a half from
the nose to the tip of the tail : their heads were large,
their nostrils bilobated, their shoulders broad and mus-
cular ; and their whole bodies fleshy and plump. Nothing
could be more sleek and soft than their fur, which was
of a bright chestnut colour ; their maws were full of
food, but so macerated that the quality could not be dis-
tinguished ; their livers, kidneys, and hearts were large,
and their bowels covered with fat. They weighed each,
when entire, full one ounce and one drachm. Within the
ear there was somewhat of a peculiar structure that I did
1 This is the noctulc bat, Vespertilio noctula, Linn. — ED.
OF SEL BORNE. 113
not understand perfectly ; but refer it to the observation of
the curious anatomist.1 These creatures sent forth a very
rancid and offensive smeli.
LETTER XXXVII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE
SELBORNE, 1771.
the 12th of July I had a fair opportunity of
contemplating the motions of the Caprimulgus,
or fern-owl, as it was playing round a large
oak that swarmed with Scarabcei solstitiales ,2
or fern-chafers. The powers of its wing
were wonderful, exceeding, if possible, the various evolu-
tions and quick turns of the swallow genus. But the cir-
cumstance that pleased me most was, that I saw it dis-
tinctly, more than once, put out its short leg while on the
wing, and, by a bend of the head, deliver somewhat into its
mouth. If it takes any part of its prey with its foot, as I
have now the greatest reason to suppose it does these chafers,
I no longer wonder at the use of its middle toe> which is
curiously furnished with a serrated claw.
Swallows and martins, the bulk of them I mean, have
1 This is termed the tragus ; it is found in all our British bats except
the greater and lesser horse-shoe bats. In man it exists only as a small
lobe projecting in front over the auditory opening.
When White first wrote to Pennant on the subject of bats, he knew
but two indigenous kinds ; the long-eared, and that which he regarded
as the short- eared : these, in fact, being all that were even known to
Linnaeus as European. White subsequently became acquainted with
another ; the great bat of the text. Pennant knew and described a
fourth, the horse-shoe bat. Many years subsequently elapsed without
the addition of another. The four indigenous species known in 1771
have now been increased to at least fourteen distinct species, so great
have been the advances that have of late years been made in England in
the search after animals and in the discrimination between them. — ED.
2 Amphimalla solstitialis, LATR.
I
114
NATURAL HISTORY
forsaken us sooner this year than usual; for on September the
22nd they rendezvoused in a neighbour's walnut tree, where
it seemed probable they had taken up their lodging for the
night. At the dawn of the day, which was foggy, they
rose all together in infinite numbers, occasioning such a
rushing from the strokes of their wings against the hazy
air, as might be heard to a considerable distance : since that
no flock has appeared, only a few stragglers.
THE FERN-OWL.
Some swifts stayed late, till the 22nd of August — a rare
instance ! for they usually withdraw within the first week.1
On September the 24th three or four ring-ousels appeared
in my fields for the first time this season : how punctual are
these visitors in their autumnal and spring migrations !
1 See Letter LII. to Mr. Harrington. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 115
LETTER XXXVIII.
10 THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, March 15, 1773.
Y my journal for last autunm it appears that
the house martins bred very late, and stayed
vory late in these parts; for on the 1st of Octo-
ber, I saw young martins in their nest nearly
fledged ; and again, on the 21st of October, we
had, at the next house, a nest full of young martins just ready
to fly ; and the old ones were hawking for insects with great
alertness. The next morning the brood forsook their nest,
and were flying round the village. From this day I never saw
one of the swallow kind till November the 3rd ; when twenty,
or perhaps thirty, house martins were playing all day long
by the side of the hanging wood, and over my field*. Did
these small weak birds, some of which were nestlings twelvi
days ago, shift their quarters at this late season of the year
to the other side of the northern tropic ? -Or rather, is it
not more probable that the next church, ruin., chalk <;liff,
steep covert, or perhaps sandbank, lake or pool (as a more
northern naturalist would say) , may become their hyber-
naculum, and afford them a ready and obvious retreat ?
We now begin to expect our vernal migration of ring-
ousels every week. Persons worthy of credit assure me
that ring- ousels were seen at Christmas., 1770, in the forest
of Bere, on the southern verge of this country. Hence wo
may conclude Ihat their migrations are only internal, and
not extended to the continent southward, if they do at first
come at all from the northern parts of this island only, and
not from the north of Europe. Come from whence they
will, it is plain, from the fearless disregard that they show
for men or guns, that they have been little accustomed to
places of much resort. Navigators mention, that, in the
Isle of Ascension, and other such desolate districts, birds
116 NATURAL HISTORY
are. so little acquainted with the human form that they settle
on men's shoulders, and have no more dread of a sailor than
they would have of a goat that was grazing. A young man
at Lewes, in Sussex, assured me that about seven years ago
ring-ousels abounded so about that town in the autumn,
that he killed sixteen himself in one afternoon : he added
further, that some had appeared since in every autumn ; but
he could not find that any had been observed before the
season in which he shot so many. I myself have found
these birds in little parties in the autumn cantoned all along
the Sussex downs, wherever there were shrubs and bushes,
from Chichester to Lewes; particularly in the autumn of
1770,
LETTER XXXIX.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Nov. 9, 1773.
S you desire me to send you such observations
as may occur, I take the liberty of making
the following remarks, that you may, accord-
ing as you think me right or wrong, admit or
reject what I here advance, in your intended
new edition of the " British Zoology/'1
The osprey was shot about a year ago at Frinsham-pond,
a great lake, at about six miles from hence, while it was
sitting on the handle of a plough and devouring a fish. It
used to precipitate itself into the water, and so take its
prey by surprise.
A great ash-coloured butcher-bird was shot last winter in
Tisted Park, and a red-backed butcher-bird at Selborne :
they are rarce aves in this county.2
1 This was the third edition, which subsequently appeared in 1776,
and contained many of the notes forwarded by Gilbert White in this
and the succeeding letter. — ED.
2 Another butcher bird, or shrike, of which mention has been made
OF SELDORNE.. 117
Crows go in pairs the whole year round.
Cornish choughs abound, and breed on Beachy Head
and on all the clifts of the Sussex coast.1
The common wild pigeon, or stock dove, is a bird of
passage in the south of England, seldom appearing till to-
wards the end of November; is usually the latest winter
bird of passage. Before our beechen woods were so much
destroyed, we had myriads of them, reaching in strings for
a mile together as they went out in a morning to feed.
They leave us early in spring ; where do they breed ? *
The people of Hampshire and Sussex call the missel-bird
the storm-cock, because it sings early in the spring in
blowing showery weather. Its song often commences with
the year. With us it builds much in orchards.
A gentleman assures me he has taken the nests of ring-
ousels on Dartmoor. They build in banks on the sides of
streams.
Titlarks 3 not only sing sweetly as they sit on trees, but
on p. 86, has also occurred at Selborne. Amongst the extracts from
White's MS. diary published by Mr. Jesse (" Gleanings in Natural
History," 2nd series, p. 161), is the following, under date May 22nd:
" Farmer Hoare's son shot a hen Wood-chat, or small butcher-bird, as
it was washing at Wellhead, attended by the cock. It is a rare bird in
these parts. In its craw were insects." — ED.
1 The chough, unfortunately, is no longer to be found on the Sussex
coast. Mr. A. E. Knox in his delightful " Ornithological Rambles in
Sussex," (1st ed. p. 210,) thus refers to it in 1849: — " Late writers on
British ornithology speak of this bird as a denizen of the cliffs of
Beachy Head. I regret to say that it is to be found there no longer.
This was certainly its last stronghold, but it disappeared from the coast
about twenty years ago. I have frequently examined the entire line of
cliffs between Brighton and Eastbourne, but could never — even with the
assistance of a spy-glass — discover one, or procure a recent specimen in
any part of Sussex." In 1865 the writer found choughs breeding in
the limestone cliffs of the Dorsetshire coast, not far from Lulworth, and
procured the eggs from two nests there in May of that year. The old
birds were frequently seen, and scrupulously left unmolested. (Cf.
" The Zoologist," 1S65, p. 9668.) The following summer the writer was
informed that they were still in their old quarters. — ED.
2 See Letter XLIV. to Pennant, and the notes thereon. — ED.
3 Gilbert White here applies the name titlark to the tree pipit,
al though elsewhere he thus designates the meadow pipit. — ED.
118 NATURAL EISTOEY
also as they play and toy about on the wing ; and particu-
larly while they are descending, and sometimes as they
stand on the ground.
Adanson's testimony seems to me to be a very poor
evidence that European swallows migrate during our winter
to Senegal. He does not talk at all like an ornithologist,
and probably saw only the swallows of that country, which
I know build within Governor 0' Harass hall against the
roof. Had he known European swallows, would he not
have mentioned the species ?
The house swallow washes by dropping into the water as
it flies. This species appears commonly about a week
before the house martin, and about ten or twelve days before
the swift.
In 1772 there were young house martins in their nest
till October the 23rd.
The swift appears about ten or twelve days later than
the house swallow, viz., about the 24th or 26th of April.
Whinchats and stonechats stay with us the whole year.1
Some wheatears continue with us the winter through.
Wagtails, all sorts,2 remain with us all the winter.
Bullfinches, when fed on hempseed, often become wholly
black.3
We have vast flocks of female chaffinches 4 all the winter,
with hardly any males among them.
1 We know of no instance in which the whinchat has been found
here in winter, although the stonechat occasionally passes that season
with ns. It is possible that female stonechats may have been mis-
taken for whinchats, and may thus have given occasion to the above
remark. — ED.
2 The pied wagtail, Motacilla Yarrellii, and the grey wagtail,
M. boarula. As to the latter, which White elsewhere calls the yellow
wagtail, see p. 47, note 4. — ED.
3 Bullfinches are not the only birds which have been observed to turn
black from feeding on hempseed, nor is hempseed the only seed which
conduces to such a change of colour. Larks have been known to
become black after being fed for some time on hempseed ; and the late
Mr. Blyth informed us that he had seen one of the little Amandavat
finches which had become black, though fed entirely on canary
seed. — ED.
4 «* British Zoology," vol. ii. p. 306. See also Letter XIII. to Pennant,
p. 46.— ED.
OF SELBORNE. 119
When you say l that in breeding time the cock snipes
make a bleating noise,, and I a drumming (perhaps I should
have rather said a humming), I suspect v:e mean the same
thing. However, while they are playing about on the
wing, they certainly make a loud piping with their mouths ;
but whether that bleating or humming is ventriloquous, or
proceeds from the motion of their wings, I cannot say ; but
this I know, that when this noise happens, the bird is
always descending, and his wings are violently agitated.2
Soon after the lapwings have done breeding, they con-
gregate, and, leaving the moors and marshes, betake them-
selves to downs and sheep-walks.
Two years ago last spring the little auk was found alive
and unhurt, but fluttering and unable to rise, in a lane a
few miles from Alresford, where there is a great lake ; it
was kept awhile, but died.3
I saw young teals taken alive in the ponds of Wolmer
1 " British Zoology," vol. ii. p. 358.
2 Reference has already been made to this curious sound, and to the
mode in which it is supposed to be produced. See antea, p. 35, note 4.
The Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert, in a note to the above passage, has
the following pertinent remarks : — "I have observed the drumming of
snipes in bright days at the beginning of April, and 1 could very clearly
discern the manner in which the sound is produced. After rising high,
and crying peet, peet, peet, which is the snipe's vernal note, it lets itself
drop obliquely through the air, keeping the wings motionless, but
turning by some muscular contraction each individual quill sideways in
the same manner that the bars of a Venetian blind are turned to admit
more light, and having descended to the customary point, it readjusts
its feathers, and rises again obliquely without sound. They will
continue for hours together amusing themselves in this manner upon a
mild day, and when they are in this mood, the sportsman has very little
chance of getting near them. The cushat has a sportive movement a
little similar, in the summer time, in the narrow wooded valleys amongst
the hills ; it is less observed in flat countries. It descends obliquely
without any motion of the wings, and when it has dived to the usual
point of descent, flaps its wings with a loud noise, and towers again
obliquely to the other side of the valley."
The rook, the peewit, and the black-headed gull all produce at times
a loud humming sound with the wings. — ED.
a Although the little auk is a sea-bird, many instances have been
recorded of its having been found inland during or after stormy
weather. — ED.
120
NATURAL HISTORY
Forest in the beginning of July last, along with flappers,
or young wild ducks.
Speaking of the swift (vol. iv. p. 15) that page says "its
drink the dew/' whereas it should be, " it drinks on the
wing/' for all the swallow kind sip their water as they
sweep over the face of pools or rivers ; like Virgil's bees,
they drink flying, " flumina summa libant." In this method
of drinking, perhaps this genus may be peculiar.
Of the sedge-bird be pleased to say it sings most part of
the night. Its notes are hurrying, but not unpleasing,
and imitative of several birds, as the sparrow, swallow, sky -
lark. When it happens to be silent in the night, by throw*
ing a stone or clod into the bushes where it sits, you
immediately set it a singing, or, in other words, though it
slumbers sometimes, yet as soon as it is awakened it re-
assumes its song.
LETTER XL.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Sept. 2, 1774.
EFORE your letter- arrived, and of my own
accord, I had been remarking and comparing
the tails of the male and female swallow, and
this ere any young broods appeared ; so
that there was no danger of confounding
the dams with their pulli. And besiles, as they were then
always in pairs, and busied in the employ of nidification,
there could be no room for mistaking the sexes, nor the
individuals of different chimneys the one for the other.
From all my observations, it constantly appeared that each
sex has the long feathers in its tail that give it that forked
shape, with this difference, that they are longer in the tail
of the male than in that of the female.
Nightingales, when their young first come abroad, and
are helpless, make a plaintive and a jarring noise ; and also
OF SELBOENE. 121
a snapping or cracking, pursuing people along the hedges
as they walk : these last sounds seem intended for menace
and defiance.
The grasshopper-lark chirps all night in the height of
summer.
Swans turn white the second year, and breed the third.
Weasels prey on moles, as appears by their being some-
times caught in mole- traps.
Sparrow-hawks sometimes breed in old crows' nests, and
the kestril in churches and ruins.
There are supposed to be two sorts of eels in the island
of Ely.1 The threads sometimes discovered in eels are
perhaps their young ; the generation of eels is very dark
and mysterious.2
Hen-harriers breed on the ground, and seem never to
settle on trees.
When redstarts shake their tails they move them hori-
zontally, as dogs do when they fawn ; the tail of a wagtail,
when in motion, bobs up and down like that of a jaded
horse.
Hedge-sparrows have a remarkable flirt with their wings
in breeding time ; as soon as frosty mornings come they
make a very piping plaintive noise.
Many birds which become siknb about Midsummer, re-
assume their notes again in September ; as the thrush,
blackbird, woodlark, willow wren, &c. ; hence August is by
much the most mute month, the spring, summer, and autumn
through. Are birds induced to sing again because the
temperament of autumn resembles that of spring ?
Linnaeus ranges plants geographically; palms inhabit
the tropics, grasses the temperate zones, and mosses and
lichens the polar circles ; no doubt animals may be classed
in the same manner with propriety.
1 Three species of eels are described and figured in Yarrcll's " History
of British Fishes." But see antea, p. 39, note 2. — ED.
2 Eels are infested by several kinds of intestinal worms, which are
doubtless the thread-like bodies referred to. The observations made
by the late Mr. Yarrell on the reproduction of eels leave little doubt
that they spawn like other fishes. — ED.
122 NATURAL HISTORY
House sparrows build under eaves in the spring ; as tlie
weather becomes hotter they get out for coolness, and nest
in plum-trees and apple-trees. These birds have been
known sometimes to build in rooks' nests, and sometimes
in the forks of boughs under rooks' nests.
As my neighbour was housing a rick he observed that
his dogs devoured all the little red mice that they could
catch, but rejected the common mice ; and that his cats ate
the common mice, refusing the red.
Redbreasts sing all through the spring, summer, and
autumn. The reason that they are called autumn songsters
is, because in the two first seasons their voices are drowned
and lost in the general chorus; in the latter their song
becomes distinguishable. Many songsters of the autumn
seem to be the young cock redbreasts of that year; notwith-
standing the prejudices in their favour, they do much mis-
chief in gardens to the summer fruits.1
The titmouse which early in February begins to make
two quaint notes, like the whetting of a saw, is the marsh
titmouse ; the great titmouse sings with three cheerful
joyous notes, and begins about the same time.
Wrens sing all the winter through, frost excepted.
House martins came remarkably late this year both in
Hampshire and Devonshire ; is this circumstance for or
against either hiding or migration ?
Most birds drink sipping at intervals ; but pigeons take
a long continued draught, like quadrupeds.
Notwithstanding what I have said in a former letter, no
grey crows were ever known to breed on Dartmoor ; it was
my mistake.
The appearance and flying of the Scarabceus solstitialis,
1 They eat also the berries of the ivy. the honeysuckle, and the
JZuonymus europceus, or spindle-tree. — G. W.
The Hon. and llev. W. Herbert observed a robin feed its young en-
tirely upon red currants. He thought they did not eat any other fruit,
but were troublesome in the hothoiise. In one year they devoured
every seed of Hcemanthus multiflorus and Griffinia liyacintlrina just as
they were ripening ; nnd it was very difficult to save the berries of any
Daphne from them. Mr. Hennie found that a redbreast which he had
in a cage greedily devoured the berries of Solatium dulcamara, but
would not touch those of privet. — ED.
OF SELBORNE.
123
or fern-chafer, commence with the month of July, and cease
about the end of it. These scarabs are the constant food
of CaprimuJgi, or fern-owls, through that period. They
abound on the chalky downs and in some sandy districts,
but not in the clays.
In the garden of the Black Bear Inn in the town of
Reading, is a stream or canal running under the stables
and out into the fields on the other side of the road ; in this
REDBREAST.
water are many carps, which lie rolling about in sight,
being fed by travellers, who amuse themselves by tossing
them bread ; but as soon as the weather grows at all severe
these fishes are no longer seen, because they retire under
the stables, where they remain till the return of spring.
Do they lie in a torpid state ? if they do not, how are they
supported ?
The note of the whitethroat, which is continually repeated,
and often attended with odd gesticulations on the wing, is
harsh and displeasing. These birds seem of a pugnacious
disposition ; for they sing with an erected crest and atti-
tudes of rivalry and defiance ; are shy and wild in breeding
time, avoiding neighbourhoods, and haunting lonely lanes
and commons ; nay, even the very tops of the Sussex
Downs, where there are bushes and covert ; but in July and
124 NATURAL HISTORY
August they bring their broods into gardens and orchards
and make great havoc among the summer fruits.1
The blackcap has, in common, a full, sweet, deep, loud,
and wild pipe ; yet that strain is of short continuance, and
his motions are desultory ; but when that birds sits calmly
and engages in song in earnest, he pours forth very sweet,
but inward melody, and expresses great variety of soft and
gentle modulations, superior perhaps to those of any of our
warblers, the nightingale excepted.
Blackcaps mostly haunt orchards and gardens : while they
warble, their throats are wonderfully distended.
The song of the redstart is superior, though somewhat
like that of the whitethroat ; some birds have a £ew more
notes than others. Sitting very placidly on the top of a tall
tree in a village, the cock sings from morning to night;
he affects neighbourhoods, and avoids solitude, and loves to
build in orchards and about houses ; with us he perches on
the vane of a tall may-pole.
The flycatcher is* of all our summer birds the most mute
and the most familiar; it also appears the last of any. It
builds in a vine, or a sweetbriar, against the wall of a house,
or in the hole of a wall, or on the end of a beam or plate,
and often close to the post of a door where people are going
in and out all day long. This bird does not make the least
pretension to song, but uses a little inward wailing note
when it thinks its young in danger from cats or other
annoyances ; it breeds but once, and retires early.2
1 The Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert thought the whole of this passage
founded in error, since according to his experience there are no birds
less shy and less pugnacious than whitethroats. And the late Mr. Daniel
remarked on this passage that " so far from being wild and shy in the
breeding season, the whitethroat frequents at that period the vicinity of
London, and forms part even of the Fauna of St. Marylebone, covered
as that parish now is with buildings. I have a nest taken by myself
from a bramble-bush, by the side of a foot-path, just beyond the houses
in the Avenue Road, Regent's Park." The fact is, Gilbert White seems
to have mistaken the lesser whitethroat for the common whitethroat.
The account which he gives of the habits of his bird will apply to the
former, but not so well to the latter species. — ED.
The spotted flycatcher not unfrequently rears a second brood. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 125
Selborne parish alone can and has exhibited at times
more than half the birds that are ever seen in all Sweden ;
the former has produced more than one hundred and twenty
species, the latter only two hundred and twenty-one. Let
me add also that it has shown near half the species that
were ever known in Great Britain.1
On a retrospect, I observe that my long letter carries
with it a quaint and magisterial air, and is very sententious ;
but, when I recollect that you requested stricture and anec-
dote, I hope you will pardon the didactic manner for the
sake of the information it may happen to contain.
1 Sweden 221, Great Britain 252 species. — G. W.
The number of so-called British birds at the present time is about
395. Of these, in round numbers, 130 are residents, 100 periodical
migrants, and 30 annual visitants, the remainder being rare and acci-
dental visitants. — ED.
126 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XLI.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
T is matter of curious inquiry to trace out how
1 those species of soft-billed birds, that con-
tinue with us the winter through, subsist
during the dead months. The imbecility
of birds seems not to be the only reason
why they shun the rigour of our winters ; for the robust
wryneck (so much resembling the hardy race of wood-
peckers) migrates, while the feeble little golden-crowned
wren, that shadow of a bird, braves our severest frosts
without availing himself of houses or villages, to which
most of our winter birds crowd in distressful seasons, while
this keeps aloof in fields and woods ; but perhaps this
may be the reason why they may often perish, and why
they are almost as rare as any bird we know.1
I have no reason to doubt but that the soft-billed birds,
which winter with us, subsist chiefly on insects in their
aurelia state. All the species of wagtails in severe weather
haunt shallow streams near their spring-heads, where they
never freeze; and, by wading, pick out the aurelias of the
genus of Phrygancce, &c.2
Hedge sparrows frequent sinks and gutters in hard
-weather, where they pick up crumbs and other sweepings :
and in mild weather they procure worms, which are stirring
1 The golden- crested wren and the common brown wren are both
very impatient of cold. In confinement, as observed by the Hon. arid
Rev. W. Herbert, the least frost is immediately fatal to them. In a
wild state, they keep themselves warm by constant active motion in the
day, and at night they secrete themselves in places where the frost cannot
reach them ; but numbers doubtless perish in severe winters. — ED.
2 See Dei-ham's " Physico-Theology," p. 235.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 127
every month in the year, as any one may see that will
be at the trouble of taking a candle to a grass-plot on any
mild winter's night. Redbreasts and wrens in the winter
haunt out-houses, stables, and barns, where they find spiders
and flies that have laid themselves up during the cold
season. But the grand support of the soft-billed birds in
winter is that infinite profusion of aureliae of the Ordo Lepi-
doptera, which is fastened to the twigs of trees and their
trunks ; to the pales and walls of gardens and buildings ;
and is found in every cranny and cleft of rock or rubbish,
and even in the ground itself.
Every species of titmouse winters with us; they have
what I call a kind of intermediate bill between the hard and
the soft, between the Linnsean genera of Fringilla, and Mo-
tacilla. One species alone spends its whole time in the
woods and fields, never retreating for succour in the se-
verest seasons to houses and neighbourhoods ; and that is
the delicate long-tailed titmouse, which is almost as minute
as the golden-crowned wren : but the blue titmouse, or nun
(Parus cceruleus] , the colemouse (Parus ater) , the great
black -headed titmouse (Fringillago'],1 and the marsh titmouse
(Parus palustris) , all resort, at times, to buildings ; and in
hard weather particularly. The great titmouse, driven by
stress of weather, much frequents houses, and, in deep
snows, I have seen this bird, while it hung with its back
downwards (to my no small delight and admiration) , draw
straws lengthwise from out the eaves of thatched houses, in
order to pull out the flies that were concealed between
them, and that in such numbers that they quite defaced the
thatch, and gave it a ragged appearance.
The blue titmouse, or nun, is a great frequenter of houses,
and a general devourer. Besides insects, it is very fond
of flesh ; for it frequently picks bones on dunghills : it is a
vast admirer of suet, and haunts butchers' shops. When a
boy, I have known twenty in a morning caught with snap
mousetraps, baited with tallow or suet. It will also pick
holes in apples left on the ground, and be well entertained
Parus major i LIMN.
128 NATURAL HISTORY
with the seeds on the head of a sunflower. The blue, marsh,
and great titmice will, in very severe weather, cany away
barley and oat straws from the sides of ricks.
How the wheatear and whinchat support themselves in
winter cannot be so easily ascertained, since they spend
their time on wild heaths and warrens ;L the former espe-
cially, where there are stone quarries : most probable it is,
that their maintenance arises from the aureliae of the Ordo
Lepidoptera, which furnish them with a plentiful table in
the wilderness.
LETTER XLII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, March 9, 1775.
OME future Faunist, a man of fortune, will, I
hope, extend his visits to the kingdom of
Ireland ; a new field, and a country little
known to the naturalist. He will not, it is
to be wished, undertake that tour unaccom-
panied by a botanist, because the mountains have scarcely
been sufficiently examined ; and the southerly counties of so
mild an island may possibly afford some plants little to be
expected within the British dominions. A person of a
thinking turn of mind will draw many just remarks from
the modern improvements of that country, both in arts and
agriculture, where premiums obtained long before they were
heard of with us. The manners of the wild natives, their
superstitions, their prejudices, their sordid way of life, will
1 The stonechat may have been mistaken for the whinchat, since the
former occasionally spends the winter here, bnt the Utter never. The
wheatear, from having been observed in March, may have been supposed
to have passed the winter with us, but we know of no instance in which
it has been met with in England between the end of November and
the beginning of March. See note 1, p. 118. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 729
extort from him many useful reflections. He should also
take with him an able draughtsman; for he must by no
means pass over the noble castles and seats, the extensive
and picturesque lakes and waterfalls, and the lofty stupen-
dous mountains, so little known, and so engaging to the
imagination when described and exhibited in a lively manner :
such a work would be well received.1
As I have seen no modern map of Scotland, I cannot
pretend to say how accurate or particular any such may be ;
but this I know, that the best old maps of that kingdom are
very defective.
The great obvious defect that I have remarked in all
maps of Scotland that have fallen in my way is, a want of a
coloured line, or stroke, that shall exactly define the just
limits of that district called the Highlands. Moreover, all
the great avenues to that mountainous and romantic country
want to be well distinguished. The military roads formed
by General Wade are so great and Roman-like an under-
taking, that they well merit attention. My old map, Moll's
Map, takes notice of Fort William ; but could not mention
the other forts that have been erected long since : therefore
a good representation of the chain of forts should not be
omitted.
The celebrated zigzag up the Coryarich must not be
passed over : Moll takes notice of Hamilton and Drumlanrig,
and such capital houses ; but a new survey, no doubt, should
represent every seat and castle remarkable for any great
event, or celebrated for its paintings, &c. Lord Breadal-
bane's seat and beautiful policy are too curious and extra-
ordinary to be omitted.
The seat of the Earl of Eglintoun, near Glasgow, is worthy
of notice. The pine plantations of that nobleman are very
grand and extensive indeed.
1 Since these lines were penned by Gilbert White, an excellent work
on the " Natural History of Ireland," in four volumes, has been pub-
lished by the late Mr. William Thompson, of Belfast. — ED.
130 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XLIII.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
PAIR of honey buzzards, Buteo apivorus sivc
vespivorus, RAH, built them a large shallow
nest, composed of twigs and lined with dead
beech en leaves, upon a tall slender beech
near the middle of Selborne Hanger, in the
summer of 1780. In the middle of the month of June a
bold boy climbed this tree, though standing on so steep
and dizzy a situation, and brought down an egg, the only
one in the nest, which had been sat on for some time, and
contained the embryo of a young bird. The egg was
smaller, and not so round as those of the common buzzard ;
was dotted at each end with small red spots, and surrounded
in the middle with a broad bloody zone.
The hen bird was shot, and answered exactly to Mr.
Ray's description of that species ; had a black cere, short
thick legs, and a long tail. When on the wing this species
may be easily distinguished from the common buzzard by
its hawk-like appearance, small head, wings not so blunt,
and longer tail. This specimen contained in its craw some
limbs of frogs and many gray snails without shells. The
irides of the eyes of this bird were of a beautiful bright
yellow colour.
About the 10th of July in the same summer a pair of
sparrow-hawks bred in an old crow's nest on a low beech in
the same Hanger; and as their brood, which was nume-
rous, began to grow up, became so daring and ravenous,
that they were a terror to all the dames in the village that
had chickens or ducklings under their care. A boy climbed
the tree, and found the young so fledged that they alJ
escaped from him ; but discovered that a good house had
been kept : the larder was well stored with provisions ; for
he brought down a young blackbird, jay, and house-martin,
OF SELBOENE.
131
all clean picked,, and some half devoured. The old birds
had been observed to make sad havock for some days among
the new-flown swallows and martins, which, being but
SPARROW-HAWK.
lately out of their nests, had not acquired those powers and
command of wing that enable them, when more mature, to
set such enemies at defiance.
LETTER XLIY.
TO THOMAS PENNANT, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Nov. 30, 1780.
VERY incident that occasions a renewal of
our correspondence will ever be pleasing and
agreeable to me.
As to the wild wood-pigeon, the CEnas or
Vinago of Ray,1 I am much of your mind, and
see no reason for making it the origin of the common house-
Columba cenas, LINN.
132 NATURAL HISTORY
dove; but suppose those that have advanced that opinion
may have been misled by another appellation, often given
to the (EnaSy which is that of stock-dove.
Unless the stock-dove in the winter varies greatly in
manners from itself in summer, no species seems more un-
likely to be domesticated and to make a house-dove. We
very rarely see the latter settle on trees at all, nor does it
ever haunt the woods ; but the former, as long as it stays
with us, from November perhaps to February, lives the
same wild life with the ring-dove (Palumbus torquatus) ; l
frequents coppices and groves, supports itself chiefly by
mast, and delights to roost in the tallest beeches. Could it
be known in what manner stock-doves build, the doubt
would be settled with me at once, provided they construct
their nests on trees, like the ring-dove, as I much suspect
they do.2
You received, you say, last spring a stock- dove from
Sussex, and are informed that they sometimes breed in that
county. But why did not your correspondent determine
the place of its nidification, whether on rocks, cliffs, or
trees ? If he was not an adroit ornithologist, I should
doubt the fact, because people with us perpetually confound
the stock-dove with the ring-dove.3
For my own part, I readily concur with you in supposing
that house-doves are derived from the small blue rock-
1 Columba palumbus, LINN.
2 The stock-dove, Columba anas, LINN., so called from its habit
of building in stocks or pollards, nests also in deserted rabbit burrows,
and even under thick furze bushes, where openings near the ground
have been made by rabbits. Mr. Salmon, in his notice of Norfolk
birds (" London's Mag. Nat. Hist.," vol. ix. p. 520), says he has
known the stock-dove to make its nest high up in a fir tree, like the
ring-dove ; but this was undoubtedly an exceptional case. It has fallen
to the lot of the writer on different occasions to find stock-doves nesting
in a church spire (cf. "The Ibis," 1867, p. 379, and "Zoologist,"
1867, p. 758) and even in limestone rocks facing the sea (cf. " The
Field," 14th April, 1866). In both instances the young were taken
and reared, and the identity of the species thus placed beyond
doubt. — ED.
3 Pennant confounded the stock-dove with the rock-dove, Columba
livia, TEMM. and made one species of them. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 138
pigeon, for many reasons.1 In the first place, the wild
stock-dove is manifestly larger than the common house-
dove, against the usual rule of domestication, which gene-
rally enlarges the breed. Again, those two remarkable
black spots on the remiges of each wing of the stock-dove,
which are so characteristic of the species, would not, one
should think, be totally lost by its being reclaimed, but
would often break out among its descendants.2 But what
is worth a hundred arguments is, the instance you give in
Sir Roger Mostyn's house-doves in Caernarvonshire, which,
though tempted by plenty of food and gentle treatment,
can never be prevailed on to inhabit their cote for any time,
but, as soon as they begin to breed, betake themselves to
the fastnesses of Ormshead, and deposit their young in
safety amidst the inaccessible caverns and precipices of that
stupendous promontory.
" Naturam expellas furca, tamen usque recurret."
I have consulted a sportsman, now in his seventy-eighth
year, who tells me that fifty or sixty years back, when the
beechen woods were much more extensive than at present,
the number of wood-pigeons was astonishing ; that he has
often killed near twenty in a day ; and that, with a long
wildfowl piece, he has shot seven or eight at a time on the
wing, as they came wheeling over his head. He moreover
adds, which I was not aware of, that often there were among
them little parties of small blue doves, which he calls
rockiers.3 The food of these numberless emigrants was
beech mast and some acorns, and particularly barley, which
they collected in the stubbles. But of late years, since the
1 This is now the generally received opinion, although formerly
naturalists, misled by the signification of the word " stock," regarded
the stock-dove as the progenitor of all the domestic breeds. — ED.
2 A good argument, as illustrated by the fact that the two conspicuous
black bars on the wing of the rock-dove may be observed in many
individuals of the numerous domestic varieties. The fact also of, the
dove-cot pigeon never perching upon trees affords another proof of its
relationship with the rock-dove, and not with the stock-dove. — ED.
3 Although called "rockiers," these "small blue doves" must have
been stock-doves. — ED.
134 NATURAL HISTORY
vast increase of turnips, that vegetable has furnished a great
part of their support in hard weather, and the holes they
pick in these roots greatly damage the crop. From this
food their flesh has contracted a rancidness which occasions
them to be rejected by nicer judges of eating, who thought
them before a delicate dish. They were shot not only as
they were feeding in the fields, and especially in snowy
weather, but also at the close of the evening, by men who
lay in ambush among the woods and groves to kill them as
they came in to roost.1 These are the principal circum-
stances relating to this wonderful internal migration which
with us takes place towards the end of November, and
ceases early in the spring. Last winter we had in Selborne
high wood about a hundred of these doves ; but in former
times the flocks were so vast, not only with us but all the
district round, that on mornings and evenings they traversed
the air like rooks, in strings, reaching for a mile together.
When they thus rendezvoused here by thousands, if they
happened to be suddenly roused from their roost trees on an
evening,
" Their rising all at once was like the sound
Of thunder heard remote."
It will by no means be foreign to the present purpose to
add that I had a relation in this neighbourhood who made it
a practice, for a time, whenever he could procure the eggs
of a ring-dove, to place them under a pair of doves that were
sitting in his own pigeon-house, hoping thereby, if he could
bring about a coalition, to enlarge his breed, and teach his
own doves to beat out into the woods, and to support them-
selves by mast. The plan was plausible, but something
always interrupted the success, for though the birds were
usually hatched, and sometimes grew to half their size, yet
none ever arrived at maturity. I myself have seen these
foundlings in their nest displaying a strange ferocity of
nature, so as scarcely to bear to be looked at, and snapping
with their bills by way of menace. In short, they always
1 Some old sportsmen say that the main part of these flocks used to
withdraw as soon as the heavy Christmas frosts were over. — Gr. W.
OF 8ELBORNE.
135
died, perhaps for want of proper sustenance; but the owner
thought that by their fierce and wild demeanour they
frighted their foster-mothers, and so were starved.
Virgil, as a familiar occurrence, by way of simile, de-
scribes a dove haunting the cavern of a rock, in such
engaging numbers, that I cannot refrain from quoting the
passage : and John Dryden has rendered it so happily in
our language, that without further excuse I shall add his
translation also.
" Qualis spelunca subito coinmota Columba,
Cui domus et dulces latebroso in pumice nidi,
Fertur in arva volans, plausumque exterrita pennis
Dat tecto ingentem — mox acre lapsa quieto,
Badit iter liquidum, celeres neque commovet alas."
" As when a dove her rocky hold forsakes,
Boused, in a fright her sounding wings she shakes ;
The cavern rings with clattering : — out she flies,
And leaves her callow care, and cleaves the skies :
At first she flutters : — but at length she springs
To smoother flight, and shoots upon her wings."
136 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER I.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, June 30, 1769.
$ HEN I was in town last month I partly en-
gaged that I would some time do myself the
honour to write to you on the subject of
natural history : and I am the more ready to
fulfil my promise, because I see you are a
gentleman of great candour, and one that will make allow-
ances ; especially where the writer professes to be an out-
door naturalist, one who takes his observations from the
subject itself, and not from the writings of others.
The following is a list of summer birds of passage which
I have discovered in this neighbourhood, ranged somewhat
in the order in which they appear:
EAII NOMINA.
USUALLY APPEARS ABOUT
1. Wryneck,
( Jynx sive torquil-
\ la:
1 The middle of March : harsh
) note.
2. Smallest wil-
( Regulus non cris-
1 March 23: chirps till Sep-
low wren,
( tatus :
) tember.
3. Swallow,-
( Hirundo domesti-
[ ca:
j- April 13.
4. Martin,
Hirundo rustica :
Ditto.
5. Sand martin,
Hirundo riparia :
Ditto.
6. Blackcap,
Atricapilla :
Ditto : a sweet wild note.
7. Nightingale,
Luscinia:
Beginning of April.
8. Cuckoo,
Cuculus :
Middle of April.
9. Middle willow
wren,
i Regulus non cris-
1 tatus :
I Ditto : a sweet plaintive note.
10. Whitethroat,
\
Ficedula Uffinis :
i Ditto : mean note ; sings on
j till September.
11. Redstart,
Ruticilla :
( Middle of April: mqre agree-
•% 11 _
] able song.
12. Stone curlew
CSdicnemus:
j End of March, loud nocturnal
| whistle.
13. Turtle-dove
Turtnr.
OF SELBORNE.
137
14. Grasshopper
lark,
i A la uda m in ima lo -
j custce voce:
15. Swift,
Hirundo apus :
1G. Less reed
sparrow,
\ Passer arundina-
3 ecus minor •
17. Land-rail,
Ortygometra :
18. Largest willow
wren,
1 Regulus non cris-
j tatus :
19. Goatsucker,
Middle of April : a small si-
bilous note, till the end of
July.
About April 27.
A sweet polyglot, but hurry-
ing : it has the notes of
many birds.
A loud harsh note, crex, crex.
" Cantat voce striduld locus -
tee:" end of April, on the
tops of high beeches.
Beginning of May : chatters
by night with a singular
noise.
May 12. A very mute bird :
this is the latest summer
bird of passage.
This assemblage of curious and amusing birds belongs to
ten several genera of the Linnasan system ; and are all of
the Or do of Passer es, save the Jynx and Guculus, which are
Piece, and the Charadrius (CEdicnemus] and Rallus (Orty-
gometra) , which are Grallce.
These birds, as they stand numerically, belong to the
following Linnaean genera : —
tsucker, ) .
fernowl, } Capnmulgus :
20. Flycatcher,
Stoparola :
1.
2, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 16, 18.
3, 4, 5, 15.
8.
12.
Jynx: 13. Columba:
Motacilla: 17. Rallus:
Hirundo: 19. Caprimulgus:
Cuculus: 14. Alauda:
Charadius: 20. Muscicapa:
Most soft-billed birds live on insects, and not on grain
and seeds; and therefore at the end of summer they
retire ; but the following soft-billed birds, though insect-
eaters, stay with us the year round : —
BAII NOMINA.
Rubecula :
Passer troglo-
dytes :
Curruca:
Redbreast,
Wren,
Hedge sparrow,
White wagtail,
Yellow wagtail,
Gray wagtail,
Motacilla alba :
Motacilla flava :
Motacilla cinerea.
These frequent houses; and
haunt out-buildings in the
winter : eat spiders.
Haunt sinks for crumbs and
other sweepings.
These frequent shallow rivu-
lets near the spring heads,
where they never freeze :
eat the aureliae of Phry-
ganea. The smallest birds
that walk.
138
NATURAL HISTORY
Wheatear,
Golden-crowned
wren,
(EnantJie :
Rcgulus cristatus :
Some of these are to be seen
( with us the winter through.1
Whin chat, (Enanthe secunda.
Stone chatter, (Enanthe tertia :
This is the smallest British
. bird : haunts the. tops of
tall trees ; stays the winter
I, through.
A list of the winter birds of passage round this neigh-
bourhood, ranged somewhat in the order in which they
appear : —
This is a new migration, which
I have lately discovered,
about Michaelmas week,
and again about the four-
1. Ring-ousel, Merula torquata:
V teenth of March.
2. Redwing,
Turdus iliacus:
About old Michaelmas.
3. Fieldfare,
Turdus pilaris:
) Though a percher by day,
! roosts on the ground.
4. Roys ton crow,
Comix cinerea :
Most frequent on downs.
5. Woodcock,
Scolopax :
[ Appears about old Michael-
! mas.
6. Snipe,
Gallmago minor :
J Some snipes constantly breed
I with us.
7. Jack snipe,
Gallinago minima.
8. Wood-pigeon,
(Enas:
' Seldom appears till late : not
in such plenty as formerly.
9. Wild swan,
Cygnus ferus :
On some large waters.
10. Wild goose,
Anser ferus.
11. Wild duck. J
Anas torquata mi-
nor :
12. Pochard,
Anas fera fusca :
13. Wigeon,
Penelope
On our lakes and streams.
14. Teal, breeds I
with us in Wol- \
Querquedula :
.
mer Forest, J
j
15. Grosbeak,
Coccothraustes .
These are only wanderers that
16. Crossbill,
Loxia :
appear occasionally, and are
17. Silk tail, J
Garrulus Bohe-
not observant of any regu-
micus '
lar migration.
These birds, as they stand numerically, belong to the
following Linnsean genera : —
1, 2, 3. Turdus: 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14. Anas:
4. Corvus : 15, 16. Loxia:
5, 6, 7, Scolopax: 17= Ampelis.
8. Columba :
1 See note on page 128. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 139
Birds that sing in the night are but few.1
vr. t *• ! 7- • • ( " In shadiest covert hid."
Nightingale, Luscima:
( MILTON.
Woodlark, Alauda wlorea: Suspended in mid air.
Less reed spar- ( Passer arundina- ) .
< . > Among reeds and willows,
row, ] ceus minor: \
I should now proceed to such birds as continue to sing
after midsummer, but as they are rather numerous, they
would exceed the bounds of this paper; besides, as this
is now the season for remarking on that subject, I am
willing to repeat my observations on some birds concerning
the continuation of whose song I seem at present to have
some doubt.
LETTER II.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Nov. 2, 1769.
EN I did myself the honour to write to you
about the end of last June on the subject of
natural history, I sent you a list of the
summer birds of passage which I have
observed in this neighbourhood ; and also
a list of the winter birds of passage ; I mentioned besides
those soft-billed birds that stay with us the winter through
in the south of England, and those that are remarkable for
singing in the night.
According to niy proposal, I shall now proceed to such
birds (singing birds strictly so called) as continue in full
song till after midsummer ; and shall range them somewhat
1 Some others might have been added, as the reed warbler, the grass-
hopper warbler, and the cuckoo. The sky-lark often sings very late,
and the note of the corncrake may frequently be heard in May between
11 and 12 P.M. The "less reed sparrow," Passer arundaccus minor,
above mentioned is the sedge warbler, Salicaria phragmitis (Bech-
stein).— Er>.
140
NATURAL HISTORY
in the order in which they first begin to open as the spring
advances.
1. Woodlark,
2. Song-thrush,
3. Wren,
4. Redbreast,
5. Hedge spar-
row,
6. Yellowham-
mer,
7. Skylark,
8. Swallow,
9. Blackcap,
10. Titlark,1
11. Blackbird,
12. Whitethroat,
13. Goldfinch,
14. Greenfinch,
15. Less reed
sparrow,
16. Common lin-
net,
KAII NOMINA.
Alauda arbor ea :
Turdus simpliciter
dictus :
Passer troglo-
dytes :
Eubecula:
Curruca :
Eniberiza flava :
Alauda vulgaris :
Hirundo domesti-
ca :
Atricapilla :
Alauda pratorum :
Merula vulgaris:
Ficedula affinis:
Carduelis :
Chloris:
Passer arundina-
ceus minor :
Linaria vulgaris : -
( In January, and continues to
\ sing through all the summer
^
and autumn.
( In February, and on to
< August, reassume their
( song in autumn.
j All the year, hard frost ex-
( cepted.
Ditto.
j Early in February, to July
| the 10th.
j Early in February, and on
I through July to Aug. 21st.
In February, and on to Oct.
!• From April to September.
Beginning of April to July 13.
j From middle of April to July
( the 16th.
( Sometimes in February and
\ March, and so on to July
[ 23rd, reassumes in autumn.
In April, and on to July 23rd.
( April, and through to Sep-
\ tember 16.
On to July and August 2nd.
May, on to beginning of
July.
( Breeds and whistles on till Au-
gust; reassumes its note
when they begin to congre-
gate in October, and again
early before the flocks se-
parate.
1 Gilbert White, it would seem, did not clearly distinguish the tree
pipit, Anthus arboreus, which he calls the titlark, from the meadow
pipit, Anthus pratensis, which is the titlark of other authors. The
former is a migratory bird, arriving in April and leaving in September,
and a good songster (see p. 117) ; the latter is found here through-
out the year, though many go southward for the winter, and is a very
poor songster. The former, as its name implies, lives chiefly in trees ;
the latter lives almost entirely on the ground, and in its habits and
mode of feeding closely resembles the wagtail. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 141
Birds that cease to be in full song, and are usually silent
at or before Midsummer : —
BAII NOMINA.
17. Middle wil- ) Regulus non cris- j Middle of June: begins in
low wren, f tatus : ( April.
18. Redstart, Ruticilla : Ditto: begins in May.
19. Chaffinch, Fringilla \ **i™»»g «f J™e : ™?* «"*
} in February.
- -VT. , ,. , T . . ( Middle of June: sino-s first
20. Nightingale, Luscima: 1 . ^ ^
Birds that sing for a short time, and very early in the
spring :—
'January 2, 1770, in February.
Is called in Hampshire and
Sussex the storm-cock, be-
21. Missel-bird, Turdus viscivorus :
cause its song is supposed
to forebode windy wet wea-
ther : is the largest sing-
ing bird we have.
22. Great tit- f In February, March, April:
mouse or ox- \ Fringillago : I reassumes for a short time
eye, j I in September.
Birds that have somewhat of a note or song, and yet are
hardly to be called singing birds :—
f Its note as minute as its per-
J son ; frequents the tops of
: < , . , ^ , £ r,,
ed wren, ) high oaks and firs : the
23. Golden-crown- \ J son ; frequents the tops of
r
\
f Regul
)
us cnstatus :
smallest British bird.
24. Marsh tit- } „ ( Haunts great woods : two
f Parus palustns •{ , -,
mouse, ) ( harsh sharp notes.
25. Small willow- \ Regulus non cris- ( Sings in March, and on to Sep-
wren, f tatus : ( tember.
,%'.,, ( Cantat voce stridula locustce;
26. Largest ditto, Ditto : 1 * -, f * .,
| from end of April to August.
f Chirps all night, from the
27. Grasshopper- ) Alauda minima ^^ f £ ^ tQ the end
lark, f voce locust: -| ofjulj
( All the breeding time : from
28. Martin, Hirundo agrestis : | Maj ^ Sept|mbei,
29. Bullfinch, Pyrrhula.
. ,j ,. ( From the end of January to
30. Bunting, Emberiza alba 1 T ,
( July.
All singing birds, and those that have any pretensions to
142 NATURAL HISTORY
song, not only in Britain, but perhaps the world through,
come under the Linnsean Or do of Passer es.
The above-mentioned birds, as they stand numerically,
belong to the following Linnasan genera : —
1,7,10,27. Alauda: 8,28. Hirundo:
2,11,21. Turdus: 13,16,19. Fringilla:
6, 30. Emberiza : 14, 29. Loxia.
Birds that sing as they fly are but few :—
RAII NOMINA.
Skylark, Alauda vulgaris : Rising, suspended, and falling,
f In its descent ; also sitting on
Titlark, Alauda pratorum : \ trees, and walking on the
1 ground.
,,r 1T , A -, j 7 ( Suspended ; in hot summer
Woodlark, Alauda arborea : 1 V ,. ,, . , A ,
( nights all night long.
Blackbird, Merula : Sometimes from bush to bush
( Uses when singing on the
Whitethroat, Ficedulce affinis : ' wing odd jerks and gesti-
[ culations.
c< n ( Hirundo domes- ( , „
swallow, «> } In soft sunny weather.
Wren, Passer troglodytes: Sometimes from bush to bush
Birds that breed most early in these parts : * —
~ ( Hatches in February and
Raven, Corns: { ^.^
Song- thrush, Turdus: In March.
Blackbird, Merula : In March.
Rook, Cornixfrugilega: Builds the beginning of March.
Woodlark, Alauda arborea : Hatches in April.
( Palumbus torqua- ) _ , . . . „ . ..
Ring dove, < > Lays the beginning of April.
All birds that continue in full song till after Midsummer
appear to me to breed more than once.
Most kinds of birds seem to me to be wild and shy some-
what in proportion to their bulk ; I mean in this island,
where they are much pursued and annoyed ; but in Ascen-
1 To this list might have been added the robin, since it not unfrc-
quently nests in January during mild winters. — ED.
OF SELBORNE.
143
sion Island, and many other desolate places, mariners have
found fowls so unacquainted with a human figure, that they
would stand still to be taken ; as is the case with boobies,
&c. As an example of what is advanced, I remark that the
golden-crested wren (the smallest British bird) will stand
BUSTARD.
unconcerned till you come within three or four yards of it,
while the bustard (Otis), the largest British land fowl, does
not care to admit a person within so many furlongs.1
1 " Besides the barren ' brecks ' of Norfolk and Suffolk, the great
bustard, on good authority, appears in former times to have been ex-
tremely common on all the open parts of this island which were suited
to its habits — the elevated moors of Haddingtonshire and Berwickshire,
the desolate wolds of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, Newmarket and
Royston Heaths on the borders of Cambridgeshire, together with the
downs of Berkshire, Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, Southampton, and .Sussex
144 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER III.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BABRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Jan. 15, 1770.
I T was no small matter of satisfaction to me to
find that you were not displeased with my
little methodus of birds. If there was any
merit in the sketch, it must be owing to its
punctuality. For many months I carried a
list in my pocket of the birds that were to be remarked,
and, as I rode or walked about my business, I noted each
day the continuance or omission of each bird's song; so-
that I am as sure of the certainty of my facts as a man can
be of any transaction whatsoever.
I shall now proceed to answer the several queries which
you put in your two obliging letters, in the best manner
that I am able. Perhaps Eastwick, and its environs, where
being all more or less frequented by it; but in every one of these locali-
ties it had ceased to exist before the last of the race of British bustards
fell victims to the advancement of agricultural enterprise in this (Nor-
folk) and the adjoining county." — STEVENSON'S Birds of Norfolk,
vol. ii. p. 2. It has long been extinct in Scotland, the occurrence of
probably the last Scottish straggler is recorded by Dr. Fleming in his
"History of British Animals," p. 115, where he states that one was
shot in 1803 in Morayshire. As regards Ireland, the great bustard is
included by Smith, in his " History of Cork," as one of the birds of the
county of Cork in 1749, but if ever it was really found in Ireland, it has
long since become extinct there.
Our knowledge of the supposed gular pouch in the male bustard,
originally due to a British anatomist, Dr. James Douglas, was first
made known in 1740 by Albin, in his " Nat. Hist. Brit. Birds," iii.
p. 36. Since that date many have been the contributions published,
and various the opinions expressed, on this very curious subject. In
the " Ibis " for 1862, pp. 107-27, will be found a very full and interest-
ing account by Professor Newton of all that had been previously pub-
lished on the matter, supplemented with observations of his own, and
an important communication on the same subject by Dr. Cullen is
given in the "Ibis," 1865, p. 143. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 145
you heard so very few birds, is not a woodland country,
and therefore not stocked with such songsters. If you will
cast your eye on my last letter, you will find that many
species continued to warble after the beginning of July.
The titlark and yellowhammer breed late, the latter very
late ; and therefore it is no wonder that they protract their
song : for I lay it down as a maxim in ornithology, that as
long as there is any incubation going* on there is music. As
to the redbreast and wren, it is well known to the most
incurious observer that they whistle the year round, hard
frost excepted ; especially the latter.
It was not in my power to procure you a blackcap, or a
less reed-sparrow, or sedgo bird, alive. As the first is un-
doubtedly, and the last, as far as I can yet see, a summer
bird of passage, they would require more nice and curious
management in a cage than I should be able to give them :
they are both distinguished songsters. The note of the
former has such a wild sweetness that it brings to my mind
those lines in a song in <( As You Like It."
" And tune his merry note
Unto tlie wild bird's throat."
SHAKSPEARE.
The latter has a surprising variety of notes resembling
the song of several other birds; but then it has also a
hurrying manner, not at all to its advantage : it is notwith-
standing a delicate polyglot.
It is new to me that titlarks in cages sing in the night ;
perhaps only caged birds do so. I once knew a tame red-
breast in a cage that always sang as long as candles were in
the room ; but in their wild state no one supposes they sing
in the night.
I should be almost ready to doubt the fact, that there are
to be seen much fewer birds in July than in any former
month, notwithstanding so many young are hatched daily.
Sure I am, that it is far otherwise with respect to the swallow
tribe, which increases prodigiously as the summer advances :
and I saw, at the time mentioned, many hundreds of young
wagtails on the banks of the Cherwell, which almost covered
the meadows. If the matter appears as you say in tho
L
146 NATURAL HISTORY
other species/ may it not be owing to the dams being
engaged in incubation, while the young are concealed by the
leaves ?
Many times have I had the curiosity to open the stomachs
of woodcocks and snipes, but nothing ever occurred that
helped to explain to me what their subsistence might be :
all that I could ever find was a soft mucus, among which lay
many pellucid small gravels.1
LETTER IV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SKLBORNE, Feb. 19, 1770.
OUR observation, that " the cuckoo does not
deposit its egg indiscriminately in the nest
of the first bird that comes in its way, but
probably looks out a nurse in some degree
congenerous, with whom to intrust its
young/' is perfectly new to me, and struck me so forcibly,
that I naturally fell into a train of thought that led me to
consider whether the fact was so, and what reason there was
1 That good observer, Mr. Thompson, in his " Natural History of
Ireland" (Birds, vol. ii. [>„ 239) states that on examination of the
stomachs of thirteen woodcocks, killed at different periods and in every
kind of weather, from October to March, one was found to contain only
small pebbles ; ten vegetable matter, chiefly Conferva (in one instance
an aquatic moss), and several of them worms of small or moderate size,
insect larvae and aquatic coleoptera, together with a few pebbles. The
vegetable matter, of which there is often a considerable quantity,
probably remains intact after the gastric juice has acted on the worms
and other animal food, and thus appears disproportionate to the other
contents. As to the food of snipe, he says (toni. cit. p. 2G8), " The
contents of the stomach of seven of these birds, which were particularly
examined, and all from different localities, were as follows : — Of three
shot in the month of January, two contained a few seeds, and the third
was half filled with soft vegetable matter ; two shot in March exhibited
the remains of vegetable food, which resembled Conferva; of two killed
OF SELBOENE. 147
for it. When I came to recollect and inquire, I could not
find that any cuckoo had ever been seen in these parts,
except in the nest of the wagtail, the hedge-sparrow, the
titlark, the whitethroat, and the redbreast, all soft-billed
insectivorous birds. The excellent Mr. Willughby mentions
CUCKOO.
the nest of the ring-dove (Palumbus), and of the chaffinch1
(Fringilla), birds that subsist on acorns and grains, and'
such hard food ; but then he does not mention them as of
his own knowledge, but says afterwards that he saw himself
a wagtail feeding a cuckoo.1 It appears hardly possible
In October, one contained a large worm, and two or three seeds of
different kinds; the other two, insect larvre (Ascaris-like in form).
Fragments of stone, of which some were the size of small peas, were
found in all, the last-noted one being filled with them.
In almost all moist soils, and in cow-dung, peculiar small thin worms
of a uniform deep red colour (not at all the same species found in
uplands and gardens) occur, and during slight frosts they come up to
the surface in thousands. During such weather, both woodcocks and.
snipe make these their chief food, and are then in first-rate condi-
tion.— ED.
1 In "The Ibis" for 1865, p. 178, Mr. Dawson Rowley, on the
authority of continental as well as British .authors, has published a list
148 NATURAL HISTORY
that a soft-billed bird should subsist on the same food with
the hard-billed, for the former have thin membranaceous
stomachs suited to their soft food; while the latter, the
granivorous tribe, have strong muscular gizzards which, like
mills, grind, by the help of small gravels and pebbles, what
is swallowed. This proceeding of the cuckoo, of dropping
its eggs as it were by chance, is such a monstrous outrage
on maternal affection, one of the first great dictates of
nature, and such a violence on instinct that, had it only been
related of a bird in the Brazils or Peru, it would never have
merited our belief. But yet, should it farther appear that
this simple bird, when divested of that natural crapyy that
seems to raise the kind in general above themselves, and
inspire them with extraordinary degrees of cunning and
address, may be still endued with a more enlarged faculty
of discerning what species are suitable and congenerous
nursing-mothers for its disregarded eggs and young, and
may deposit them only under their care, this would be
adding wonder to wonder, and instancing in a fresh manner
that the methods of Providence are not subjected to any
mode or rule, but astonish us in new lights, and in various
and changeable appearances.1
of thirty -seven European species of birds in whose nests the egg of tlie
cuckoo has been found more or less frequently, and to this list the editor
of " The Ibis " was able to add fifteen others. On different authority,
another list of twenty -two species is given in " The Birds of Middle-
sex," p. 120. — ED.
1 Since the above remarks were written by Gilbert White, so many
extraordinary facts in relation to the habits of the cuckoo have been
brought to light, mainly through the researches of modern ornithologists,
that it would be impossible within the compass of a foot-note to men-
tion half of them.
Commencing with the observations of Dr. Jenner (Phil. Trans
vol. Ixxviii. p. 225), the reader may be referred to what has been pub-
lished by Col. Montagu (On. Diet. Introd.), Mr. Blackwall (Man-
chester Memoirs, 2nd series), Mr. Durham Weir (Macgillivray's Hist.
Brii. Birds, vol. iii. p. 128), Dr. Baldamus (Naumannia, 1853, pp. 307-
326), a very remarkable paper translated and epitomized by the Rev.
A. C. Smith and Mr. George Dawson Rowley respectively in the
"Zoologist," 1868, pp. 1145-1166, and "The Ibis," 1865, p. 178;
Herr Adolf Muller, in " Der Zoologische Garten," for Oct. 1868;
OF SELBORNE. 149
What was said by a very ancient and sublime writer con-
cerning the defect of natural affection in the ostrich, may be
well applied to the bird we are talking of:
" She is hardened against her young ones, as though they
wore not her's :
" Because God hath deprived her of wisdom, neither hath
he imparted to her understanding." ]
Query. Does each female cuckoo lay but one egg in a
season, or does she drop several in different nests according
as opportunity offers ? 2
LETTER Y.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, April 12, 1770.
HEARD many birds of several species sing
last year after midsummer ; enough to prove
that the summer solstice is not the period that
puts a stop to the music of the woods. The
yellowhammer, no doubt, persists with more
steadiness than any other ; but the woodlark, the wren, the
redbreast, the swallow, the whitethroat, the goldfinch, the
common linnet, are all undoubted instances of the truth of
what I advanced.
If this severe season does not interrupt the regularity of
the summer migrations, the blackcap will bo here in two or
three days. I wish it was in my power to procure you one
of those songsters ; but I am no birdcatcher ; and so little
and Professor A. Newton, in "Nature" of Nov. 18, 1869, and his new
edition of YarrelTs " History of British Birds." Reference should also
be made to Mr. Stevenson's chapter on the cuckoo, in his " Birds of
Norfolk," vol. i. p. 303, and, if the reader's patience is not then exhausted,
to a couple of articles by the writer of this note, contributed to " Science
Gossip" of May 1, 1870, and "The Field" of Nov. 22, 1873.— ED.
1 Job xxxix. 16, 17. * See p. 151, note 1. — ED
150 NATURAL HISTORY
useql . to birds in a cage, that I fear if I had one it would
soon die for want of skill in feeding.
Was your reed sparrow, which you kept in a cage, the
thick-billed reed sparrow of the Zoology, p. 820; or was it
the less reed sparrow of Ray, the sedge-bird of Mr
Pennants last publication, p. 16 ?
As to the matter of long-billed birds growing fatter in
moderate frosts, I have no doubt within myself what should
be the reason. The thriving at those times appears to me
to arise altogether from the gentle check which the cold
throws upon insensible perspiration. The case is just the
same with blackbirds, &c. ; and farmers and warreners
observe, the first, that their hogs fat more kindly at such
times, and the latter that their rabbits are never in such
good case as in a gentle frost. But when frosts are severe,
and of long continuance, the case is soon altered ; for then
«, want of food soon over-balances the repletion occasioned
by a checked perspiration. I have observed, moreover,
that some human constitutions are more inclined to plump-
ness in winter than in summer.
When birds come to suffer by severe frost, I find that the
first that fail and die are the redwing fieldfares, and then
the song-thrushes.
You wonder, with good reason, that the hedge sparrows,
&c., can be induced at all to sit on the egg of the cuckoo
without being scandalized at the vast disproportioned size
of the supposititious egg ; but the brute creation, I suppose,
have very little idea of size, colour, or number. For the
common hen, I know, when the fury of incubation is on her,
will sit on a single shapeless stone instead of a nest full of
eggs that have been withdrawn; and, moreover, a hen-
turkey, in the same circumstances, would sit on in the empty
nest till she perished with hunger.
I think the matter might easily be determined whether a
cuckoo lays one or two eggs, or more, in a season, by open-
ing a female during the laying-time. If more than one
was come down out of the ovary, and advanced to a good
size, doubtless then she would that spring lay more than
one?.
OF SELBOENE. 151
I will endeavour to get a hen, and to examine.1
Your supposition that there may be some natural obstruc-
tion in singing birds while they are mute, and that when
this is removed the song recommences, is new and bold ; I
wish you could discover some good grounds for this suspicion.
I was glad you were pleased with my specimen of the
Caprimulgus, or fern owl ; you were, I find, acquainted with
the bird before.
When we meet, I shall be glad to have some conversation
with you concerning the proposal you make of my drawing
up an account of the animals in this neighbourhood. Your
partiality towards my small abilities persuades you, I fear,
that I am able to do more than is in my power : for it is no
small undertaking for a man unsupported and alone to begin
a natural history from his own autopsia ! Though there is
endless room for observation in the field of nature, which is
boundless, yet investigation (where a man endeavours to be
sure of his facts) can make but slow progress ; and all that
one could collect in many years would go into a very narrow
compass.
Some extracts from your ingenious " Investigations of
the Difference between the present Temperature of the Air in
Italy," &c., have fallen in my way; and gave me great satisfac-
tion : they have removed the objections that always arose in
my mind whenever I came to the passages which you quote.
Surely the judicious Virgil, when writing a didactic poem
for the region of Italy, could never think of describing
freezing rivers, unless such severity of weather pretty
frequently occurred !
P.S. Swallows appear amidst snows and frost.2
1 It has since been ascertained that cuckoos do lay more than one
egg in a season, although Dr. Baldamus, to whose remarkable essay we
have already referred, states that each hen bird lays but one egg in each
nest ; and adds that the same hen bird lays eggs of similar colouring,
as a general rule, in the nests of the same species only. — ED.
2 We apprehend that allusion is here made to the fact that swallows
which arrive early in this country occasionally get caught in late frosts,
and vice versa. — ED.
152 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER VI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, May 21, 1770.
HE severity and turbulence of last month so
interrupted the regular process of summer
migration, that some of the birds do but just
begin to show themselves, and others are
apparently thinner than usual ; as tho^white-
throat, the blackcap, the redstart, the flycatcher. I well
remember that after the very severe spring in the year
1739-40, summer birds of passage were very scarce. They
come probably hither with a south-east wind, or when it
blows between those points ; but in that unfavourable year
the winds blowed the whole spring and summer through
from the opposite quarters. And yet amidst all these dis-
advantages two swallows, as I mentioned in my last, appeared
this year as early as the llth of April, amidst frostand snow;
but they withdrew again for a time.
I am not pleased to find that some people seem so little
satisfied with Scopoli' s new publication ;l there is room to
expect great things from the hands of that man, who is a
good naturalist : and one would think that a history of
the birds of so distant and southern a region as Carniola
would be new and interesting. I could wish to see that
work, and hope to get it sent down.2 Dr. Scopoli is physi-
cian to the wretches that work in the quicksilver mines of
that district.
When you talked of keeping a reed sparrow, and giving
1 This work be calls his " Annus Primus Historico-Naturalis." — G.W.
2 Later in the same year the author procured the work here spoken
of. His observations on it will be found in his Letters to Pennant,
numbered XXXI. and XXXII., as well as incidentally in others. See
also the following Letter. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 153
it seeds, I could not help wondering : because the reed
sparrow which I mentioned to you (Passer arundinaceus
minor, Km1) is a soft-billed bird, and most probably
migrates hence before winter ; whereas the bird you kept
(Passer torquatus, RAII*) abides all the year, and is a thick-
billed bird. I question whether the latter be much of a
songster; but in this matter I want to be better informed.3
The former has a variety of hurrying notes, and sings all
night. Some part of the song of the former, I suspect, is
attributed to the latter. We have plenty of the soft-billed
sort; which Mr. Pennant had entirely left out of his "British
Zoology," till I reminded him of his omission. See " British
Zoology" last published, p. 16.4
I have somewhat to advance on the different manners in
which different birds fly and walk; but as this is a subject
that I have not enough considered, and is of such a na-
ture as not to be contained in a small space, I shall say no-
thing further about it at present.5
No doubt the reason why the sex of birds in their first
plumage is so difficult to be distinguished is, as you say,
" because they are not to pair and discharge their parental
functions till the ensuing spring." As colours seem to be
the chief external sexual distinction in many birds, these
colours do not take place till sexual attachments begin to
obtain. And the case is the same in quadrupeds ; among
whom, in their younger days, the sexes differ but little :
but, as they advance to maturity, horns and shaggy manes,
beards and brawny necks, &c. &c., strongly discriminate the
male from the female. We may instance still farther in our
own species, where a beard and stronger features are usually
characteristic of the male sex : but this sexual diversity does
not take place in earlier life ; for a beautiful youth shall be
1 The sedge warbler, Salicaria phragmitis. — ED.
2 The reed bunting, Emberiza schceniclus. — ED.
3 See Letter XXIV. to Pennant, p. 82, note 2.— ED.
4 See Letters XXIV. XXV. and XXVI. to Pennant.— ED.
6 See Letter XLII. to Daines Barrington. — ED.
154 NATURAL HISTORY
so like a beautiful girl that the difference shall not be dis-
cernible ;
" Quern si puellarura inserercs choro,
Mire sagaces fallerel hospites
Discrimen pbscurum, solutis
Crinibus, ambiguoque vultu." — HOR.
LETTER VII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
• , RINGMER, near LEWES, Oct. 8, 1770.
AM glad to hear that Kuckahn1 is to furnish
you with the birds of Jamaica ; a sight of the
Hirundines of that hot and distant island
would be a great entertainment to me.
The Anni of Scopoli are now in my posses-
sion ; and I have read the Annus Primus with satisfaction :
for though some parts of this work are exceptionable, and
he may advance some mistaken observations ; yet the orni-
thology of so distant a country as Carniola is very curious.
Men that undertake only one district are much more likely
to advance natural knowledge than those that grasp at
more than they can possibly be acquainted with : every
kingdom, every province, should have its own mono-
grapher.
The reason, perhaps, why he mentions nothing of Ray's
Ornithology may be the extreme poverty and distance of
his country, into which the works of our great naturalist
may have never yet found their way. You have doubts, I
know, whether this Ornithology is genuine, and really the
work of Scopoli : as to myself, I think I discover strong
tokens of authenticity; the style corresponds with that of
his Entomology ; and his characters of his ordines and
1 Kuckahn was the author of a paper in the " Philosophical Transac-
tions" for 1770 on the preservation of dead birds. — ED.
OF SELJWRNE. 155
genera are many of them new, expressive, and masterly,
lie has ventured to alter some of the Linnosan genera with
sufficient show of reason.
It might, perhaps, be mere accident that you saw «o
many swifts, and no swallows, at Staines ; because, in my
long observation of those birds, I never could discover the
least degree of rivalry or hostility between the species.
Ray remarks that birds of the Gallince order, as cocks
and hens, partridges and pheasants, &c., are pulveratrices,
such as dust themselves, using that method of cleansing
their feathers, and ridding themselves of their vermin. As
far as I can observe, many birds that dust themselves never
wash : and I once thought that those birds that wash them-
selves would never dust ; but here I find myself mistaken ;
for common house sparrows are great pulueratrices, being
frequently seen grovelling and wallowing in dusty roads ;
and yet they are great washers. Does not the skylark
dust?
Query. Might not Mahomet and his followers take one
method of purification from these pulveratrices ? because I
find, from travellers of credit, that if a strict Mussulman is
journeying in a sandy desert where no water is to be found,
at stated hours he strips off his clothes, and most scrupulously
rubs his body over with sand or dust.
A countryman told me he had found a young fern owl in
the nest of a small bird on the ground ; and 'that it was fed
by the little bird. I went to see this extraordinary phe-
nomenon, and found that it was a young cuckoo hatched in
the nest of a titlark : it was become vastly too big for its
nest, appearing
in tenui re
Majorca pennas nido extendissc •
and was very fierce and pugnacious, pursuing my finger, as
I teased it, for many feet from the nest, and sparring and
buffeting with its wings like a gamo-cock. The dupe of a
dam appeared at a distance, hovering about with meat in its
mouth, and expressing the greatest solicitude.
In July I saw several cuckoos skimming over a large
pond; and found, after some observation, that they were
156 NATURAL HISTORY
feeding on the Libellulce, or dragon flies ; some of wliich
they caught as they settled on the weeds, and some as they
were on the wing. Notwithstanding what Linnaeus says, I
cannot be induced to believe that they are birds of prey.
This district affords some birds that are hardly ever heard
of at Selborne. In the first place considerable flocks of
crossbeaks (Loxice curvirostrce) have appeared this summer
in the pine-groves belonging to this house ; the water-ousel
is said to haunt the mouth of the Lewes river, near New-
haven; and the Cornish chough builds, I know, all along
the chalky cliffs of the Sussex shore.1
I was greatly pleased to see little parties of ring-ousels
(my newly discovered migrators) scattered, at intervals, all
along the Sussex downs from Chichester to Lewes. Lot
them come from whence they will, it looks very suspicious
that they are cantoned along the coast in order to pass the
Channel when severe weather advances. They visit us
again in April, as it should seem, in their return ; and are
not to be found in the dead of winter. It is remarkable
that they are very tame, and seem to have no manner of
apprehensions of danger from a person with a gun. There
are bustards on the wide downs near Brighthelmstone.2 No
doubt you are acquainted with the Sussex Downs : the
prospects and rides round Lewes are most lovely !
As I rode along near the coast I kept a very sharp look-
out in the lanes and woods, hoping I might, at this time of
the year, have discovered some of the summer short- winged
1 This is now no longer the case. See Letter XXXIX. to Pennant,
p. 117, note. — ED.
2 The great bustard has long ceased to frequent the South Downs
except as a rare and accidental visitant. Amongst various extracts
from Gilbert White's MS. diary, published by Mr. Jesse in the second
series of his "Gleanings in Natural History," is one (p. 164) wherein
the author states that on Nov. 17, 1782, he spent three hours at a lone
farm-house in the midst of the downs between Andover and Winton,
where " the carter told us that about twelve years ago he had seen a
flock of eighteen bustards at one time on that farm, and once since
only two." Further on (p. 180) he adds: "Bustards when seen on the
downs resemble fallow-deer at a distance."
See Letter II. to Daines Barrington, p. 143, note. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 157
birds of passage crowding towards the coast in order for
their departure : but it was very extraordinary that I never
saw a redstart, whitethroat, blackcap, uncrestcd wren, fly-
catcher, &c. And I remember to have made the same re-
mark in former years, as I usually come to this place annually
about this time. The birds most common along the coast
at present are the stonechatters, whinchats, buntings, linnets,
some few wheatears, titlarks, &c. Swallows and house
martins abound yet, induced to prolong their stay by this
soft, still, dry season.
A land tortoise, which has been kept for thirty years in a
little walled court belonging to the house where I now am
visiting, retires under ground about the middle of November,
and comes forth again about the middle of April. When it
first appears in the spring it discovers very little inclination
towards food ; but in the height of summer grows voracious :
and then as the summer declines, its appetite declines ; so
that for the last six weeks in autumn it hardly eats at all.
Milky plants, such as lettuces, dandelions, sowthistles, are
its favourite dish. In a neighbouring village one was kept
till by tradition it was supposed to be a hundred years old.
An instance of vast longevity in such a poor reptile !
LETTER VIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES HARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Dec. 20, 1770.
HE birds that I took for Aberdavines were
reed sparrows (Passeres torquati] .
There are, doubtless, many home internal
migrations within this kingdom that want to
be better understood ; witness those vast
flocks of hen chaffinches that appear with us in the winter
without hardly any cocks among them. Now, was there a
158 NATURAL HISTOKY
duo proportion of each sex, it should seeni very improbable
that any one district should produce such numbers of these
little birds ; and much more when only one-half of the
species appears: therefore we may conclude that the
chaffinches (Fringillce ccelebes) , for some good purposes,
have a peculiar migration of their own in which the sexes
part. Nor should it seem so wonderful that the intercourse
of sexes in this species of birds should be interrupted in
winter ; since in many animals, and particularly in bucks
and docs, the sexes herd separately, except at the season
when commerce is necessary for the continuance of the
breed. For this matter of the chaffinches see "Fauna
Suecica," p. 85, and " Systema Nature," p. 318. I see
every winter vast flights of hen chaffinches, but none of
cocks.1
Your method of accounting for the periodical motions of
the British singing birds, or birds of flight, is a very
probable one ; since the matter of food is a great regu-
lator of the actions and proceedings of the brute creation :
there is but one that can be set in competition with it, and
that is love. But I cannot quite acquiesce with you in one
circumstance, when you advance that, " when they have
thus feasted, they again separate into small parties of five
or six, and get the best fare they can within a certain
district, having no inducement to go in quest of fresh-
turned earth." Now, if you mean that the business of
congregating is quite at an end from the conclusion of
wheat- so wing to the season of barley and oats, it is not the
case with us ; for larks and chaffinches, and particularly
linnets, flock and congregate as much in the very dead of
winter as when the husbandman is busy with his ploughs
and harrows.
Sure there can be no doubt but that woodcocks and
fieldfares leave us in the spring, in order to cross the seas,
and to retire to some districts more suitable to the purpose
of breeding. That the former pair before they retire, and
that the hens are forward with egg, I myself, when I was a
1 See Letter XIII. to Pennant, p. 47, note L— ED.
OF SELBORNE. 159
sportsman, have often experienced. It cannot indeed be
denied but that now and then we hear of a woodcock's nest,
or young birds, discovered in some part or other of this
island : but then they are always mentioned as rarities,
and somewhat out of the common course of things : but as
to redwings and fieldfares, no sportsman or naturalist has
ever yet, that I could hear, pretended to have found the
nest or young of those species in any part of these king-
doms. And I the more admire at this instance as extra-
ordinary, since, to all appearance, the same food in summer
as well as in winter might support them here which main-
tains their congeners, the blackbirds and thrushes, did
they choose to stay the summer through.1 From hence it
1 Both the redwing and fieldfare are stated on some authority to'
have occasionally nested in the British Islands: see Mr. More's
article on the " Distribution of Birds in Great Britain during the nesting
season," published in " The Ibis" for 1865, p. 19. In " Charlesworth's
Magazine of Xatural History," the late Mr. Blyth reported that several
instances of the redwing's nesting in Surrey were known to him ; and
in the same periodical (vol. i. p. 440) he quoted the statement of a dealer
that a nest of this bird had been taken at Barnet. Yarrell instances a
nest found at Godalming: and one taken in Leicestershire is recorded by
Mr. J. H. Ellis in'" The Zoologist" for 1864, p. 9248. In Shropshire
Mr. Eyton has observed that some of these birds remain all the summer
in his neighbourhood. In May, 1855, the late Dr. Saxby found a nest of
the redwing at Maintwrog, North AY ales. It was placed in a tall Portugal
laurel; and he repeatedly observed the bird sitting on her eggs, which
he afterwards took. The circumstance was recorded by him in " The
Zoologist'' "Sor 1861, p. 7427 ; but a more detailed account, copied from
his private journal, has since been published by his brother, the Rev.
Stephen Saxby, in his recent work on the " Birds of Shetland," p. 384.
In the Outer Hebrides Mr. Bullock, in a letter to Dr. Fleming, dated
23rd Apri], 1819, mentioned the circumstance of the redwing breeding
in Harris, where he had observed it in the preceding summer. (Sec
Fleming's Hist. Brit. An. p. 65.) In Orkney, Mr. Low says ("Fauna
Orcadensis," p. 58) that he observed a pair of these birds in Hoy
throughout the greatest part of the summer, and imagined that they built
amongst the bushes there, though with the strictest search he could not
discover the nest.
In like manner there are several reported instances of the fieldfare
having remained to breed in this country. Mr. St. John in his " Tour
in Sutherlandshire," vol. i. p. 206, says that he was shown a nest and
eggs from near the Spey ; and the bird is reported to have nested also
160 NATURAL HISTORY
appears that it is not food alone which determines some
species of birds with regard to their stay or departure.
Fieldfares and redwings disappear sooner or later according
as the warm weather comes on earlier or later. For I well
remember, after that dreadful winter, 1739-40, that cold
north-east winds continued to blow on through April and
May, and that these kinds of birds (what few remained of
them) did not depart as usual, but were seen lingering
about till the beginning of Juno.
The best authority that we can have for the nidification
of the birds above mentioned in any district, is the testi-
mony of faunists that have written professedly the natural
history of particular countries. Now, as to the fieldfare,
Linnaeus, in his " Fauna Suecica," says of it, that " maximis
in arboribus nidificat :" and of the redwing he says, in the
same place, that ft nidificat in mediis arlmsculis, sive
sepibus : ova sex cueruleo-viridia maculis nigris variis."
Hence we may be assured that fieldfares and redwings
breed in Sweden. Scopoli says, in his " Annus Primus/' of
the woodcock, that " nupta ad nos venit circa cequinoctium
vernale :" meaning in Tyrol, of which he is a native. And
afterwards he adds, " nidificat inpaludibus alpinis : ova ponit
3 — 5." It does not appear from Kramer that woodcocks
breed at all in Austria : but he says, " Avis licec septentrio-
nalium provinciarum cestivo tempore incola est; ubi plerumque
nidificat. Appropinquante hyeme, australiores provincias
petit : Itinc circa plenilunium mensis Octobris plerumque
in Selkirkshire (see Fairholme, "Mag. Nat. Hist." 1837, pp. 339 and
439). The late Mr. Blyth published an account of its having nested
at Merton, in Surrey ("Mag. Kat. Hist." vol. iii. p. 467). but unfortu-
nately he did not see the birds himself. Another supposed instance
of the fieldfare breeding in the south of England was reported by Dr.
Bree in " The Field" of June 12th and 19th, 1869. Mr. Blyth stated
(" Mag. Xat. Hist." vol. vii. p. 242), that both the redwing and fieldfare
had been repeatedly seen throughout the summer in a wood called the
Wood of Logic, upon the estate of Sir John Forbes, at Fin try, in
Aberdeenshire. On the 29th July, 1864, a fieldfare was shot in a
garden near Kirby Muxloe, in Leicestershire, and forwarded to the
editor of" The Field" for examination (see " Zoologist," 1864, p. 9248).
It had been observed about the garden all the summer. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 161
Afdst)'iam transmigrat. Tune rursus circa plefiilunhun potis-
simum mensis Martii per Austriam matrimonio juncta ad
septentrionales provincias redit" For the whole passage
(which I have abridged) see Elenchus, &c., p. 351. This
seems to be a full proof of the migration of woodcocks ;
though little is proved concerning the place of breeding.1
P.S. — -There fell in the county of Rutland, in three
weeks of this present very wet weather, seven inches and a
half of rain, which is more than has fallen in any three
weeks for these thirty years past in that part of the world.
A mean quantity in that county for one year is twenty
inches and a half.
LETTER IX.
TO THE HONOUKABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
FYFIELD, near ANDOVER, Feb. 12, 1771.
OU are, I know, no great friend to migra-
tion ; and the well attested accounts from
various parts of the kingdom seem to justify
you in your suspicions, that at least many
of the swallow kind do not leave us in the
winter, but lay themselves up like insects and bats, in a
torpid state, and slumber away the more uncomfortable
months till the return of the sun and fine weather awakens
them.
But then we must not, I think, deny migration in
general; because migration certainly does subsist in some
places, as my brother in Andalusia has fully informed me.
Of the motions of these birds he has ocular demonstration,
1 It is now well known that although a large proportion of the wood-
cocks which visit us in autumn leave again in the spring, numbers
remain behind to breed here, and the reported instances of nests and
eggs being found in different counties are becoming more and more
numerous every year. — ED.
M
IG2 NATURAL HISTORY
for many weeks together, both spring and fall : during
which periods myriads of the swallow kind traverse the
Straits from north to south, and from south to north,
according to- the season. And these vast migrations con-
sist not only of Hirundines, but of bee-birds, hoopoes,
Oropendolas,1 or golden thrushes, &c., &c., and also of many
of our soft-billed summer birds of passage ; and, moreover, of
birds which never leave us, such as all the various sorts
of hawks and kites. Old Belon, 200 years ago, gives a
curious account of the incredible armies of hawks and kites
which he saw in the spring-time traversing the Thracian
Bosphorus from Asia to Europe. Besides the above-men-
tioned, he remarks that the procession is swelled by whole
troops of eagles and vultures.
Now, it is no wonder that birds residing in Africa should
retreat before the sun as it advances, and retire to milder
regions, and especially birds of prey, whose blood being
heated with hot animal food, are more impatient of a sultry
climate ; but then I cannot help wondering why kites and
hawks, and such hardy birds as are known to defy all the
severity of England, and even of Sweden and all north
Europe, should want to migrate from the south of Europe,
and be dissatisfied with the winters of Andalusia.2
It does not appear to me that much stress may be laid
on the difficulty and hazard that birds must run in their
1 Oropendola is the Spanish name for the Golden Oriole. — ED.
2 The migration of the kites and hawks no doubt depends in a
measure upon that of the smaller birds upon which they prey ; in the
same way that some of the latter are influenced by the appearance or
disappearance of locusts and other insects, which form their chief food.
In Lloyd's " Game Birds and Wild-fowl of Norway and Sweden,"
p. 370, there is a wonderful picture by Wolf, entitled " The Bird-
cloud," in which, in illustration of the author's remarks, the artist has
depicted a vast flock of wild fowl on migration harassed by birds of
prey. In Andersson's " Birds of Damaraland," p. 264, a singular
account ;s given of the way in which the pratincoles (Glareola melon-
optera) attend the flying swarms of locusts in South Africa. The
writer says : — " These birds come, I may sajr, in millions, attendant on
the flying swarms of locusts ; indeed, the appearance of a few of them
i<» looked unon as a sure presage of the locust swarms being at
hand."— ED.
OF SELBORNE. 103
migrations, by reason of vast oceans, cross winds, &c. ;
because, if we reflect, a bird may travel from England to
the equator without launching out and exposing itself to
boundless seas, and that by crossing the water at Dover,
and again at Gibraltar. And I with the more confidence
advance this obvious remark, because my brother has
always found that some of his birds, and particularly the
swallow kind, are very sparing of their pains in crossing
the Mediterranean; for when arrived at Gibraltar, they
do not,
" Ranged in figure wedge their way,
and set forth
Their airy caravan high over seas
Flying, and over lands with mutual wing
Easing their flight." MILTOX.
but scout and hurry along in little detached parties of six
or seven in a company; and sweeping low, just over the
surface of the land and water, direct their course to tho
opposite continent db the narrowest passage they can find:
They usually slope across the bay to the south-west, and go
pass over opposite to Tangier, which, it seems, is the nar-
rowest space.
In former letters we have considered whether it was
probable that woodcocks in moonshiny nights cross the
German ocean from Scandinavia. As a proof that birds of
less speed may pass that sea, considerable as it is, I shall
relate the following incident, which, though mentioned to
have happened so many years ago, was strictly matter of
fact : — As some people were shooting in the parish of
Trotton, in the county of Sussex, they killed a duck in
that dreadful winter, 1708-9, with a silver collar about its
neck,1 on which were engraven the arms of the king of
Denmark. This anecdote the rector of Trotton at that
time has often told to a near relation of mine ; and, to the
best of my remembrance, the collar was in the possession of
the rector.2
1 I have read a like anecdote of a swan. — G. W.
2 We suspect that this bird was a cormorant, anrl that the rector of
164 NATURAL HISTORY
At present I do not know anybody near the seaside that
will take the trouble to remark at what time of the moon
woodcocks first come; if I lived near the sea myself, I
would soon tell you more of the matter. One thing I used
to observe when I was a sportsman, that there were times
in which woodcocks were so sluggish and sleepy that they
would drop again when flushed just before the spaniels,
nay, just at the muzzle of a gun that had been fired at
them ; whether this strange laziness was the effect of a
recent fatiguing journey, I shall not presume to say.
Nightingales not only never reach Northumberland and
Scotland, but also, as I have been always told, Devonshire
and Cornwall. In those two last counties we cannot
attribute the failure of them to the want of warmth : the
defect in the west is rather a presumptive argument that
these birds come over to us from the continent at the nar-
rowest passage, and do not stroll so far westward.1
Trotton and his friend mistook it for a duck on account of its webbed
feet. Cormorants, as is well known, were formerly trained for fishing
purposes, and wore collars, usually it is true of leather, but in the case of
the king of Denmark, they may well have been of silver, or sufficiently
ornamented with silver, to be spoken of as though made of that metal.
Our own King James I., who was a great sportsman, made fishing with
cormorants quite a fashionable amusement. He had a regular estab-
lishment for these birds on the Thames at Westminster, and, to meet
the requirements of the day, created a new office, "Master of the Royal
Cormorants." See " The Ornithology of Shakespeare," pp. 260-265.
As to the use of the "collar" or "strap," the reader may be referred
to Freeman and Salvin's "Falconry: its claims, history and practice,"
to which are added remarks on training the otier and cormorant,
pp. 327-350. — ED.
1 In a note to this passage in his edition of the present work, the late
Mr. Blyth observed that the nightingale " appears to migrate almost
due north and south, deviating but a very little indeed either to the
right or left. There are none in Brittany, nor in the Channel Islands
(Jersey, Guernsey, £c.) ; and the most westward of them probably
cross the Channel at Cape La Hogue, arriving on the coast of Dorset-
shire, and thence apparently proceeding northward rather than dis-
persing towards the west, so that they are only known as accidental
stragglers beyond at most the third degree of western longitude, a line
which cuts off the counties of Devonshire and Cornwall, together with
all Wales <and Ireland, and by far the greater portion of Scotland, in
Of SELBOBNE. 165
Let me hear from your own observation whether sky-
larks do not dust. I think they do ; and if they do,
whether they wash also.
SKYLARK.
The titlark/ or Alauda pratensis of Ray, was the poor
dupe that was educating the booby of a cuckoo mentioned
in my letter of October last.
which last-mentioned kingdom the species has once or twice occurred to
the eastward only of this meridian." With regard to the distribution
of the nightingale in the British Islands, we may quote the observations
of Professor Newton, as set forth in his edition of Yarrell's " History of
British Birds," now in course of publication, vol. i. pp. 315, 316. He
says : — " In England the nightingale's western limit seems to be
formed by the Valley of the Exe, though once, and once only, Montagu
(on this point an unerring witness) heard it singing on the 4th May,
1806, near Kingsbridge, in South Devon, and it is said to have been
heard at Teignmouth, as well as in the north of the same county at
Barnstaple. But even in the east of Devon it is local and rare, as it
also is in the north of Somerset, though plentiful in other parts of the
latter. Crossing the Bristol Channel, it is said to be not uncommon at
times near Cowbridge in Glamorganshire. Dr. Bree states (' Zoologist,'
p. 1-211) that it is found plentifully on the banks of the Wye, nenr
Tintern ; and thence there is more or less good evidence of its
occurrence in Herefordshire, Salop, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, and in
Yorkshire to about five miles north of its chief city, but as Mr.
1 Elsewhere, White applies the name titlark to the tree pipit. See
p. 117, note 2, and p. 140, note 1. — ED.
166 NATURAL HISTORY
Your letter came too late for me to procure a ring-ousel
for Mr. Tunstal during their autumnal visit ; but I will
endeavour to get him one when they call on us again in
April. I am glad that you and that gentleman saw my
Andalusian birds; I hope they answered your expectation.
Royston, or gray crows, are winter birds, that come much
about the same time with the woodcock : they, like the
fieldfare and redwing, have no apparent reason for migra-
tion, for as they fare in the winter like their congeners, so
might they, in all appearance, in the summer. Was not
Tenant, when a boy, mistaken ? Did he not find a missel-
thrush's nest, and take it for the nest of a fieldfare ?
The stock-dove, or wood-pigeon1 ((Enas, RAII), is the
last winter bird of passage which appears with us, and is
not seen till towards the end of November. About twenty
years ago they abounded in the district of Sclborne, and
strings of them were seen morning and evening that reached
a mile or more; but since the beechen woods have been
greatly thinned, they are much decreased in number/ The
Thomas Allis states, not further. Along the line thus sketched out,
and immediately to the east and south of it, the appearance of the
nightingale, even if regular, is in most cases rare, and the bird local ;
but further away from the boundary it occurs yearly with great regu-
larity in every county, and in some places is very numerous. Mr. More
states that it is * thought to have once bred near Sunderland,' and it is
said to have been once heard in Westmoreland and also in the summer
of 1808 near Carlisle; but these assertions must be looked upon with
great suspicion, particularly the last, which rests on anonymous
authority only. Still more open to doubt are the statements of the
nightingale's occurrence in Scotland, such as Mr. Duncan's (not on his
own evidence, be it remarked), published by Macgillivray ('British Birds,'
ii. p. 334) respecting a pair believed to have visited Calder Wood in
Mid Lothian in 1826; or Mr. Turnbull's ('Birds of East Lothian,'
p. 39), of its being heard near Dalrneny Park, in the same county, in
June, 1839. In Ireland there is no trace of this species." On the
continent it may be observed that the nightingale has not been met with
further north than Funcn in Denmark, and the neighbourhood of
Copenhagen. — ED.
1 The name wood- pigeon is generally applied to the ring-dove, Co-
lumba palumbus. — ED.
2 This subject has been already noticed in Letter XLIV. to Pen-
nant. The stock-dove breeds in parts of Hants and Sussex, although
doubtless it is most numerous in these counties in winter. We
OF SELBORNE. 167
ring-dove (Palumbus, RAII) , stays with us the whole year,
and breeds several times through the summer.
Before I received your letter of October last, I had just
remarked in my journal that the trees were unusually green.
This uncommon verdure lasted on late into November ; and
may be accounted for from a late spring, a cool and moist
summer, but more particularly from vast armies of chafers,
or tree-beetles, which, in many places, reduced whole
woods to a leafless, naked state. These trees shot again at
Midsummer, and then retained their foliage till very late in
the year.
My musical friend, at whose house I am now visiting, has
tried all the owls that are his near neighbours with a pitch-
pipe set at concert-pitch, and finds they all hoot in B flat.
He will examine the nightingales next spring.
LETTER X.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Aug. 1, 1771.
ROM what follows, it will appear that neither
owls nor cuckoos keep to one note. A friend
remarks that many (most) of his owls hoot
in B flat, but that one went almost half a note
below A. The pipe he tried their notes by
was a common half-crown pitch-pipe, such as masters use
for tuning of harpsichords ; it was the common London
pitch.
A neighbour of mine, who is said to have a nice ear,,
remarks that the owls about this village hoot in three
different keys, in G flat or F sharp, in B flat and A flat.
have seen pairs throughout the summer and have repeatedly found the
nest in the neighbourhood of Uppark near Petersfield, which is at no
great distance from Selborne. — ED.
J68 NATURAL HISTORY
He heard two hooting to each other, the one in A flat, and
the other in B flat. Query : Do these different notes pro-
ceed from different species, or only from various individuals ?
The same person finds upon trial that the note of the cuckoo
(of which we have but one species) varies in different indi-
viduals; for about Selborne Wood he found they were
mostly in D. He heard two sing together, the one in D,
the other in D sharp, who made a disagreeable concert. He
afterwards heard one in D sharp, and about Wolmer Forest
some in C.1 As to nightingales, he says that their notes are
so short, and their transitions so rapid, that he cannot well
ascertain their key. Perhaps in a cage and in a room, their
notes may be more distinguishable. This person has tried
to settle the notes of a swift, and of several other small
birds, but cannot bring them to any criterion.
As I have often remarked that redwings are some of the
first birds that suffer with us in severe weather, it is no
wonder at all that they retreat from Scandinavian winters ;
and much more the Ordo of Grailce, who all, to a bird, for-
sake the northern parts of Europe at the approach of winter.
" Grallce tanquam conjuratce unanimiter in fugam se conji-
ciunt; ne earum unicam quidem inter nos habitantem invenire
possimus ; ut enim cestate in australibus degere nequeunt ob
defectum lumbricorum, terramque siccamj ita nee in frigidis
ob eandem causam," says Ekmarck, the Swede, in his
ingenious little treatise called Migrationes Avium, which by
all means you ought to read while your thoughts run on the
subject of migration. See Amoenitates Acadcmicce, vol. iv.
p. 565.
Birds may be so circumstanced as to be obliged to
migrate in one country and not in another ; but the Grallce
(which procure their food from marshes and boggy grounds)
must in winter forsake the more northerly parts of Europe,
or perish for want of food.
1 Dr. Arne in his music to the " Cuckoo's Song" in "Love's Labour's
Lost" gives the note of the cuckoo as C natural and G : Gungl in his
" Cuckoo Galop" gives it as B natural and G sharp. For some further
particulars respecting the notes of owls and cuckoos, see " The Ornith-
ology of Shakespeare," pp. 90 and 151. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 169
I am glad you are making inquiries from Linnaeus con-
cerning the woodcock. It is expected of him that he should
be able to account for the motions arid manner of life of the
animals of his own Fauna.
Faunists, as you observe, are too apt to acquiesce in bare
descriptions and a few synonyms : the reason is plain, be-
cause all that may be done at home in a man's study; but
the investigation of the life and conversation of animals is
a concern of much more trouble and difficulty, and is not to
be attained but by the active and inquisitive, and by those
that reside much in the country.
Foreign systematics are, I observe, much too vague in
their specific differences, which are almost universally con-
stituted by one or two particular marks, the rest of the
description running in general terms. But our country-
man, the excellent Mr. Eay, is the only describer that
conveys some precise idea in every term or word, maintain-
ing his superiority over his followers and imitators in
spite of the advantages of fresh discoveries and modern
information.
At this distance of years it is not in my power to recol-
lect at what periods woodcocks used to be sluggish or alert
when I was a sportsman ; but upon my mentioning this
circumstance to a friend, he thinks he has observed them to
be remarkably listless against snowy foul weather. If this
should be the case, then the inaptitude for flying arises
only from an eagerness for food, as sheep are observed to be
very intent on grazing against stormy wet evenings.1
1 Amongst the miscellaneous observations, published by Mr. Jesse
from Gilbert White's MS. diary (" Gleanings Nat. Hist.," 2nd series,
p. 177) occurs the following: — "When horses, cows, sheep, deer, &c.,
feed in wind and rain, they always keep their heads down the wind
and their tails to the weather ; but birds always perch and choose to
fly with their heads to the weather, to prevent the wind from ruffling
their feathers, and the cold and wet from penetrating to their skins."
—ED.
170 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XL
TO THE HONOUKABLE DAINES BARRINGTOlN.
SELBORNE, Feb. 8, 1772.
EN I ride about in the winter, and see such
prodigious flocks of various kinds of birds, I
cannot help admiring at these congregations,
and wishing that it was in my power to
account for those appearances almost pecu-
liar to the season. The two great motives which regulate
the proceedings of the brute creation are love and hunger;
the former incites animals to perpetuate their kind, the
latter induces them to preserve individuals : whether either
of these should seem to be the ruling passion in the matter
of congregating is to be considered. As to love, that is
out of the question at a time of the year when that soft
passion is not indulged; besides, during the amorous
season, such a jealousy prevails between the male birds, that
they can hardly bear to be together in the same hedge or
field. Most of the singing and elation of spirits of that
time seems to me to be the effect of rivalry and emulation :
and it is to this spirit of jealousy that I chiefly attribute the
equal dispersion of birds in the spring over the face of the
country.
Now as to the business of food : as these animals are
actuated by instinct to hunt for necessary food, they should
not, one would suppose, crowd together in pursuit of sus-
tenance at a time when it is most likely to fail ; yet such
associations do take place in hard weather chiefly, and
thicken as the severity increases. As some kind of self-
interest and self-defence is no doubt the motive for the pro-
ceeding, may it not arise from the helplessness of their
state in such rigorous seasons ; as men crowd together,
when under great calamities, though they know not why ?
Perhaps approximation may dispel some degree of cold ;
OF SELBORNE. 171
and a crowd may make each individual appear safer from
the ravages of birds of prey and other dangers.
If I admire when I see how much congenerous birds love
to congregate, I am the more struck when I see incon-
gruous ones in such strict amity. If we do not much
wonder to see a flock of rooks usually attended by a train
of daws, yet it is strange that the former should so fre-
quently have a flight of starlings for their satellites. Is it
Decause rooks have a more discerning scent than their
attendants, and can lead them to spots more productive of
food? Anatomists say that rooks, by reason of two large
nerves which run down between the eyes into the upper
mandible, have a more delicate feeling in their beaks than
other round-billed birds, and can grope for their meat when
out of sight. Perhaps, then, their associates attend them
on the motive of interest, as greyhounds when on the
motions of their finders ; and as lions are said to do on the
yelpings of jackals. Lapwings and starlings sometimes
associate.
LETTER XII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
March 0, 1772.
S a gentleman and myself were walking on
the 4th of last November round the sea-
banks at Newhaven, near the mouth of the
Lewes river, in pursuit of natural knowledge,
we were surprised to see three house swallows
gliding very swiftly by us. That morning was rather chilly,
with the wind at north-west; but the tenor of the weather
for some time before had been delicate, and the noons re-
markably warm. From this incident, and from repeated
accounts which I meet with, I am more and more induced
to believe that many of the swallow kind do not depart
from this island; but lay themselves up in holes and
172 NATURAL HISTORY
caverns ; and do, insect-like and bat-like, come forth at
mild times, and then retire again to their latebrce. Nor
make I the least doubt but that, if I lived at Newhaven,
Seaford, Brighthelmstone, or any of those towns near the
chalk-cliffs of the Sussex coast, by proper observations, I
should see swallows stirring at periods of the winter, when
the noons were soft and inviting, and the sun warm and
invigorating. And I am the more of this opinion from
what I have remarked during some of our late springs, that
though some swallows did make their appearance about the
usual time, viz., the 13th or 14th of April, yet, meeting
with a harsh reception, and blustering cold north-east
winds, they immediately withdrew, absconding for several
days, till the weather gave them better encouragement.1
LETTER XIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES B ARLINGTON.
April 12, 1772.
[ HILE I was in Sussex last autumn, my resi-
dence was at the village near Lewes, from
whence I had formerly the pleasure of writing
to you. On the 1st of November, I remarked
that the old tortoise, formerly mentioned,
began first to dig the ground in order to the forming its
hybernaculum, which it had fixed on just beside a great
1 Writers on this subject do not as a rule distinguish between tor-
pidity and hybernation. There are numerous instances of swallows
becoming torpid, but none of their hybernating, none of their being
aroused from a dormant state by unusually warm weather in early
spring, which latter fact, says Mr. Blyth, cannot be too much impressed
on those who still advocate the theory of the hybernation of a portion
oi these birds. It should be remembered also, he says, that the adults
01 one species, the chimney swallow, and the young of all, moult during
the winter months. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 173
tuft of hepaticas. It scrapes out the ground with its fore
feet, and throws it up over its back with its hind ; but the
motion of its legs is ridiculously slow, little exceeding the
hour-hand of a clock ; and suitable to the composure of an
animal said to be a whole month in performing one feat of
copulation. Nothing can be more assiduous than this
creature night and day in scooping the earth, and forcing
its great body into the cavity ; but, as the noons of that
season proved unusually warm and sunny, it was continually
interrupted, and called forth, by the heat in the middle of
the day; and though I continued there till the 13th of
November, yet the work remained unfinished. Harsher
weather, and frosty mornings, would have quickened its
operations. No part of its behaviour ever struck me more
than the extreme timidity it always expresses with regard
to rain; for though it has a shell that would secure it
against the wheel of a loaded cart, yet does it discover as
much solicitude about rain as a lady dressed in all her best
attire, shuffling away on the first sprinklings, and running
its head up in a corner. If attended to, it becomes an
excellent weather-glass ; for as sure as it walks elate, and as
it were on tip-toe, feeding with great earnestness in a
morning, so sure will it rain before night. It is totally
a diurnal animal, and never pretends to stir after it becomes
dark. The tortoise, like other reptiles, has an arbitrary
stomach as well as lungs ; and can refrain from eating as
well as breathing for a great part of the year. When first
awakened it eats nothing ; nor again in the autumn before
it retires ; through the height of the summer it feeds vora-
ciously, devouring all the food that comes in its way. I
was much taken with its sagacity in discerning those that
do it kind offices : for, as soon as the good old lady comes
in sight who has waited on it for more than thirty years, it
hobbles towards its benefactress with awkward alacrity ;
but remains inattentive to strangers. Tims not only " the
ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib,"1 but
the most abject reptile and torpid of beings distinguishes
1 Isaiah, i. 3.
171 NATURAL HISTORY
the hand that feeds it, and is touched with the feelings of
gratitude !
P.S. In about three days after I left Sussex the tortoise
retired into the ground under the hepaticas.
LETTER XIV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, March 26, 1773.
HE more I reflect on the a-ropy* of animals,
the more I am astonished at its effects. Nor
is the violence of this affection more wonder-
ful than the shortness of its duration. Thus
every hen is in her turn the virago of the
yard, in proportion to the helplessness of her brood ; and
will fly in the face of a dog or a sow in defence of those
chickens, which in a few weeks she will drive before her
with relentless cruelty.
This affection sublimes the passions, quickens the inven-
tion^ and sharpens the sagacity of the brute creation. Thus
a hen, just become a mother, is no longer that placid bird
she used to be, but with feathers standing on end, wings
hovering, and clucking note, she runs about like one
possessed. Dams will throw themselves in the way of the
greatest danger in order to avert it from their progeny.
Thus a partridge will tumble along before a sportsman in
order to draw away the dogs from her helpless covey. In
the time of nidification the most feeble birds will assault
the most rapacious. All the Hirundines of a village are up
in arms at the sight of a hawk, whom they will persecute
till he leaves that district. A very exact observer has
often remarked that a pair of ravens nesting in the rock of
Gibraltar would suffer no vulture or eagle to rest near their
station, but would drive them from the hill with an amazing
OF SELBORNE. 175
fury: even the blue thrush at the season of breeding would
dart out from the clefts of the rocks to chase away the
kestril, or the sparrow hawk. If you stand near the nest
of a bird that has young, she will not be induced to betray
them by an inadvertent fondness, but will wait about at a
distance with meat in her mouth for an hour together.
Should I farther corroborate what I have advanced
above by some anecdotes which I probably may have men-
tioned before in conversation, yet you will, I trust, pardon
the repetition for the sake of the illustration.
The flycatcher of the Zoology (the Stoparola of Eay)
builds every year in the vines that grow on the walls of my
house. A pair of these little birds had one year inad-
vertently placed their nest on a naked bough, perhaps in a
shady time, not being aware of the inconvenience that
followed. But a hot sunny season coming on before the
brood was half fledged, the reflection of the wall became
insupportable, and must inevitably have destroyed the
tender young, had not affection suggested an expedient,
and prompted the parent birds to hover over the nest all
the hotter hours, while with wings expanded, and mouths
gaping for breath, they screened off the heat from their
suffering offspring.
A farther instance I once saw of notable sagacity in a
willow wren, which had built in a bank in my fields. This
bird a friend and myself had observed as she sat in her
nest ; but were particularly careful not to disturb her,
though we saw she eyed us with some degree of jealousy.
Some days after, as we passed that way, we were desirous
of remarking how this brood went on ; but no nest could
be found, till I happened to take up a large bundle of long
green moss, as it were, carelessly thrown over the nest, in
order to dodge the eye of any impertinent intruder.
A still more remarkable mixture of sagacity and instinct
occurred to me one day as my people were pulling off the
lining of a hotbed, in order to add some fresh dung. F^om
out of the side of this bed leaped an animal with great
agility that made a most grotesque figure; nor was it
without great difficulty that it could be taken; when it
1?6 NATURAL HISTORY
proved to be a large white-bellied field mouse1 with three or
four young clinging to her teats by their mouths and feet.
It was amazing that the desultory and rapid motions of this
dam should not oblige her litter to quit their hold, especially
when it appeared that they were so young as to be both
naked and blind !
To these instances of tender attachment, many more of
which might be daily discovered by those that are studious
of nature, may be opposed that rage of affection, that
monstrous perversion of the o-ropyn, which induces some
females of the brute creation to devour their young because
their owners have handled them too freely, or removed
them from place to place ! Swine, and sometimes the
more gentle race of dogs and cats, are guilty of this horrid
and preposterous murder. When I hear now and then of
an abandoned mother that destroys her offspring, I am not
so much amazed ; since reason perverted, and the bad
passions let loose, are capable of any enormity ; but why
the parental feelings of brutes, that usually flow in one
most uniform tenor, should sometimes be so extravagantly
diverted, I leave to abler philosophers than myself to
determine.
LETTER XV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, July 8, 1773.
OME young men went down lately to a pond
on the verge of Wolmer Forest to hunt
flappers, or young wild-ducks, many of which
they caught, and, among the rest, some very
minute yet well fledged wild- fowls alive,
which upon examination I found to be teals. I did not
The long-tailed field mouse, Mus sylraticus. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 177
know till then that teals ever bred in the south of England,
and was much pleased with the discovery ; this I look upon
as a great stroke in natural history.1
We have had, ever since I can remember, a pair of
white owls that constantly breed under the eaves of this
church. As I have paid good attention to the manner of
life of these birds during their season of breeding, which
lasts the summer through, the following remarks may not
perhaps be unacceptable : — About an hour before sunset
(for then the mice begin to run) they sally forth in quest of
prey, and hunt all round the hedges of meadows and small
enclosures for them, which seem to be their only food.
In this irregular country we can stand on an eminence and
see them beat the fields over like a setting-dog, and often
drop down in the grass or corn. I have minuted these
birds with my watch for an hour together, and have found
that they return to their nest, the one or the other of them,
about once in five minutes ; reflecting at the same time on
the adroitness that every animal is possessed of as far as
regards the well-being of itself and offspring. But a piece
of address, which they show when they return loaded,
should not, I think, be passed over in silence. As they
take their prey with their claws, so they carry it in their
claws to their nest ; but, as the feet are necessary in their
ascent under the tiles, they constantly perch first on the
roof of the chancel, and shift the mouse from their claws to
their bill, that the feet may be at liberty to take hold of the
plate on the wall as they are rising under the eaves.
White owls seem not (but in this I am not positive) to
hoot at all; all that clamorous hooting appears to me to
come from the wood kinds.2 The white owl does indeed
1 The teal still breeds in the neighbourhood of Wolmer (see p. 29,
note 1), and the writer has repeatedly seen the nest eggs and young of
this bird in the western portion of the adjoining county of Sussex.
—ED.
2 Mr. Colquhoun, the author of" The Moor and the Loch," speaking
of the white or barn owl, says : — " They do hoot, but very rarelv.
I heard one once six times in succession, and then it ceased." Sir
William Jardine once shot a white owl in the very act of hooting ; and
N
178 NATURAL HISTORY
snore and hiss in a tremendous manner ; and these menaces
well answer the intention of intimidating : for I have known
a whole village up in arms on such an occasion, imagining
the churchyard to be full of goblins and spectres. White
owls also often scream horribly as they fly along ; from
this screaming probably arose the common people's imagi-
nary species of screech-owl, which they superstitiously
think attends the windows of dying persons. The plumage
of the remiges of the wings of every species of owl that I
have yet examined is remarkably soft and pliant. Perhaps
it may be necessary that the wings of these birds should
not make much resistance or rushing, that they may be
enabled to steal through the air unheard upon a nimble and
watchful quarry.
While I am talking of owls, it may not be improper to
mention what I was told by a gentleman of the county of
Wilts. As they were grubbing a vast hollow pollard-ash
that had been the mansion of owls for centuries, he dis-
covered at the bottom a mass of matter that at first he
could not account for. After some examination, he found
that it was a congeries of the bones of mice (and perhaps
of birds and bats) that had been heaping together for ages,
being cast up in pellets out of the crops of many genera-
tions of inhabitants. For owls cast up the bones, fur, and
feathers of what they devour, after the manner of hawks.
He believes, he told me, that there were bushels of this
kind of substance.1
Mr. TV. Boulton, of Beverley, referring to a bird of this species which
he had reared from the nest, observed (" Zoologist," 1863, p. 8765) : —
" It does ' hoot' exactly like the long eared owl, but not so frequently.
I use the term 'hoot' in contradistinction to 'screech,' which it often
docs when irritated." — ED.
1 In order to ascertain the nature of the food of owls, a Germnn
naturalist, Dr. Altum, collected their " pellets" at different seasons of
the year, and in different localities, and carefully examined them, with
the following remarkable results. In 706 pellets of the white or barn
owl he found the remains of the following animals : bats 16, rats 3,
mice 237, voles 693, shrews 1590, mole 1, small birds 22. In 210
pellets of the tawny owl (£. aluco) he found remains of stoat 1, rats 6,
mice 42, voles 296, squirrel 1, shrews 33, moles 4$, small birds 18. and
OF SELBORNE. 179
When brown owls hoot, their throats swell as big as a
hen's egg. I have known an owl of this species live a full
year without any water. Perhaps the case may be the
same with all birds of prey. When owls fly they stretch
out their legs behind them as a balance to their large heavy
heads : for as most nocturnal birds have large eyes and
ears they must have large heads to contain them. Large
eyes I presume are necessary to collect every ray of light,
and large concave ears to command the smallest degree of
sound or noise.
It will be proper to premise here that the sixteenth, eighteenth,
twentieth, and twenty-first letters have been published already in the
" Philosophical Transactions :" but as nicer observation has furnished
several corrections and additions, it is hoped that the re-publication of
them will not give offence ; especially as these sheets would be very
imperfect without them, and as they will be new to many readers who
had no opportunity of seeing them when they made their first appear-
ance.—G. W.
The Hirundines are a most inofieasive, harmless, enter-
taining, social, and useful tribe of birds : they touch no
fruit in our gardens ; delight, all except one species, in
attaching themselves to our houses ; amuse us with their
migrations, songs, and marvellous agility : and clear our
outlets from the annoyances of gnats and other troublesome
insects. Some districts in the South Seas, near Guayaquil,1
are desolated, it seems, by the infinite swarms of venomous
mosquitoes, which Uli the air, and render those coasts in-
supportable. It would be worth inquiring whether any
a large number of beetles belonging to seven or eight different genera,
besides quantities of cock-chafers (Melolontlia vulgaris). In pellets
of the long-eared owl, he found remains of mice 14, voles 271, shrews
2, and small birds 3. Of the short-eared owl he examined only a few
pellets, which were found to contain the remains of water voles only,
but as these were obtained in a single locality where these animals were
especially abundant, he reserved his remarks on the food of this owl
until he could make further investigations. In the details, however,
which he has furnished, we have abundant proof of the important ser-
vices which owls render to the agriculturist. — ED.
1 See " Ulloa's Travels."— G. W.
180 NATURAL HISTORY
species of Hirundines is found in those regions. Whoever
contemplates the myriads of insects that sport in the sun-
beams of a summer evening in this country, will soon bo
convinced to what a degree our atmosphere would be choked
with them was it not for the friendly interposition of the
swallow tribe.
Many species of birds have their peculiar lice ; but the
Hirundines alone seem to be annoyed with Dipterous in-
sects, which infest every species, and are so large, in pro-
portion to themselves, that they must be extremely irksome
and injurious to them. These are the Hippoboscce, Tiirun-
dinis,1 with narrow subulated wings, abounding in every
nest ; and are hatched by the warmth of the bird's own
body during incubation, and crawl about under its feathers.
A species of them is familiar to horsemen in the south of
England under the name of forest- fly ; and to some of side-
fly, from its running sideways like a crab. It creeps under
the tails, and about the groins of horses which, at their
first coming out of the north, are rendered half frantic by
the tickling sensation ; while our own breed little regards
them.2
The curious Reaumur discovered the large eggs, or rather
pupce, of these flies, as big as the flies themselves, which he
hatched in his own bosom . Any person that will take the
trouble to examine the old nests of either species of swallows
may find in them the black shining cases or skins of tho
pupce, of these insects : but for other particulars, too long
for this place, we refer the reader to " L'Histoire de?
Insectes" of that admirable entomologist, torn. iv. pi. 11.
1 Craterina Jiinmdinis, OLFERS.
2 In the New Forest, whence its name of forest fly, the Ilwpobosca
equina, LINN., abounds in such profusion that Mr. Samouelle states, in
his " Entomologist's Useful Compendium," that he has obtained from
the Hanks of one horse six handfuls, which consisted of upwards of a
hundred specimens. He adds, " Mr. Bentley informs me, from obser-
vations he made in the summer of 1818, while in Hampshire, that the
Hippoboscce are found in a considerably greater abundance on white
and light-coloured horses than on those of a black and dark colour ;
and this observation was confirmed by the stable-keepers in the vicinity
of the Forest."— ED.
OX SELBORNE. 181
LETTER XVI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBOBNE, Nov. 20, 1773.
obedience to your injunctions I sit down to
give you some account of the house martin
or martlet; and, if my monography of this
little domestic and familiar bird should happen
to meet with your approbation, I may pro-
bably soon extend my inquiries to the rest of the British
Hirundines — the swallow, the swift, and the bank martin.
A few house martins begin to appear about the 16th of
April ; usually some few days later than the swallow. For
some time after they appear, the Hirundines in general pay
no attention to the business of nidification, but play and
sport about either to recruit from the fatigue of their
journey, if they do migrate at all, or else that their blood
may recover its true tone and texture after it has been so
long benumbed by the severities of winter. About the
middle of May, if the weather be fine, the martin begins to
think in earnest of providing a mansion for its family. The
crust or shell of this nest seems to be formed of such dirt or
loam as comes most readily to hand, and is tempered and
wrought together with little bits of broken straws to render
it tough and tenacious. As this bird often builds against
a perpendicular wall without any projecting ledge under, it
requires its utmost efforts to get the first foundation firmly
fixed, so that it may safely carry the superstructure. On
this occasion the bird not only clings with its claws, but
partly supports itself by strongly inclining its tail against
the wall, making that a fulcrum ; and thus steadied, it
works and plasters the materials into the face of the brick
or stone. But then, that this work may not, while it is
soft and green, pull itself down by its own weight, the pro-
182 NATURAL HISTORY
vident architect has prudence and forbearance enough not
to advance her work too fast; but by building only in the
morning, and by dedicating the rest of the day to food and
amusement, gives it sufficient time to dry and harden.
About half an inch seems to be a sufficient layer for a day.
Thus careful workmen when they build mud walls (informed
at first perhaps by this little bird) raise but a moderate
layer at a time, and then desist ; lest the work should be-
come top-heavy, and so be ruined by its own weight. By
this method in about ten or twelve days is formed an hemi-
spheric nest with a small aperture towards the top, strong,
compact, and warm ; and perfectly fitted for all the purposes
for which it was intended. But then nothing is more
common than for the house sparrow, as soon as the shell is
finished, to seize on it as its own, to eject the owner, and to
line it after its own manner.
After so much labour is bestowed in erecting a mansion,
as Nature seldom works in vain, martins will breed on for
several years together in the same nest, where it happens to
be well sheltered and secure from the injuries of weather.
The shell or crust of the nest is a sort of rustic-work full of
knobs and protuberances on the outside : nor is the inside
of those that I have examined smoothed with any exactness
at all ; but is rendered soft and warm, and fit for incubation,
by a lining of small straws, grasses, and feathers ; and some-
times by a bed of moss interwoven with wool. In this nest
they tread, or engender, frequently during the time of
building ; and the hen lays from three to five white eggs.
At first when the young are hatched, and are in a naked
and helpless condition, the parent birds, with tender assi-
duity, carry out what comes away from their young. Was
it not for this affectionate cleanliness the nestlings would
soon be burnt up, and destroyed in so deep and hollow a
nest, by their own caustic excrement. In the quadruped
creation, the same neat precaution is made use of; particu-
larly among dogs and cats, where the dams lick away what
proceeds from their young. But in birds there seems to be
a particular provision, that the dung of nestlings is en-
veloped in a tough kind of jelly, and therefore is the easier
OF SELBORNE. 183
conveyed off without soiling or daubing.1 Yet, as Nature
is cleanly in all her ways, the young perform this office for
themselves, in a little time, by thrusting their tails out at
the aperture of their nest. As the young of small birds
presently arrive at their faixia., or full growth, they soon
become impatient of confinement, and sit all day with their
heads out at the orifice, where the dams, by clinging to the
nest, supply them with food from morning to night. For
a time, the young are fed on the wing by their parents ; but
the feat is done by so quick and almost imperceptible a
slight, that a person mast have attended very exactly to
their motions before he would be able to perceive it. As
soon as the young are able to shift for themselves, the dams
immediately turn their thoughts to the business of a second
brood: while the first flight, shaken off and rejected by
their nurses, congregate in great flocks, and are the birds
that are seen clustering and hovering on sunny mornings
and evenings round towers and steeples, and on the roofs of
churches and houses. These congregations usually begin
to take place about the first week in August ; and therefore
we may conclude that by that time the first flight is pretty
well over. The young of this species do not quit their
abodes all together, but the more forward birds get abroad
some days before the rest. These, approaching the eaves
of buildings, and playing about before them, make people
think that several old ones attend one nest. They are
often capricious in fixing on a nesting-place, beginning
many edifices, and leaving them unfinished ; but when once
n nest is completed in a sheltered place, it serves for several
seasons. Those which breed in a ready-finished house get
1 It is a very curious provision of nature, as remarked by the Hon.
and Rev. W. Herbert, that the dung of all nestlings is enclosed in a thir?
membrane, which enables the old birds to carry it away in their bills,
which they do regularly each time they bring food to the nest. The
young instinctively, even before they can see, protrude their hind
quarters to eject the dung from the nest; but if the parent did not
carry it away, there would be a congeries of dirt under the nest, which
would not only be uncleanly, but would attract attention and discover
their retreat. — ED.
184 NATURAL HISTORY
the start, in hatching, of those that build new, by ten days
or a fortnight. These industrious artificers are at their
labours in the long days before four in the morning : when
they fix their materials, they plaster them on with their
chins, moving their heads with a quick vibratory motion.
They dip and wash as they fly sometimes in very hot
weather, but not so frequently as swallows. It has been
observed that martins usually build to a north-east or north-
west aspect, that the heat of the sun may not crack and
destroy their nests : but instances are also remembered
where they bred for many years in vast abundance in a hot
stifled inn-yard, against a wall facing to the south.
Birds in general are wise in their choice of situation : but
in this neighbourhood, every summer, is seen a strong
instance to the contrary at a house without eaves in an
exposed district, where some martins build year by year in
the corners of the windows. But, as the corners of these
windows (which face to the south-east and south-west) are
too shallow, the nests are washed down every hard rain;
and yet these birds drudge on to no purpose from summer
to summer, without changing their aspect or house. It is
a piteous sight to see them labouring when half their nest
is washed away, and bringing dirt — " generis lapsi sarcire
ruinas" Thus is instinct a most wonderfully unequal
faculty : in some instances so much above reason, in other
respects so far below it ! Martins love to frequent towns,
especially if there are great lakes and rivers at hand ; nay,
they even affect the close air of London. And I have not
only seen them nesting in the Borough, but even in the
Strand and Fleet Street ; but then it was obvious from the
dinginess of their aspect that their feathers partook of the
filth of that sooty atmosphere. Martins are by far the least
agile of the four species ; their wings and tails are short,
and therefore they are not capable of such surprising turns
and quick and glancing evolutions as the swallow. Accord-
ingly they make use of a placid easy motion in a middle
region of the air, seldom mounting to any great height, and
never sweeping long together over the surface of the ground
or water. They do not wander far for food, but affect
OF SELBORNE. 185
sheltered districts, over some lake, or under some hanging
wood, or in some hollow vale, especially in windy weather.
They breed the latest of all the swallow kind: in 1772
they had nestlings on to October the 21st, and are never
without unfledged young as late as Michaelmas.
As the summer declines, the congregating flocks increase
in numbers daily, by the constant accession of the second
broods ; till at last they swarm in myriads upon myriads
round the villages on the Thames, darkening the face of the
sky as they frequent the aits of that river where they
roost. They retire (the bulk of them I mean) in vast flocks
together, about the beginning of October : but have ap-
peared of late years in a considerable flight in this neigh-
bourhood, for one day or two, as late as November the 3rd
and 6th, after they were supposed to have been gone for
more than a fortnight. They therefore withdraw with us
the latest of any species. Unless these birds are very
short-lived indeed, or unless they do not return to the
district where they are bred, they must undergo vast
devastations somehow, and somewhere ; for the birds that
return yearly bear no manner of proportion to the birds that
retire.
; House martins are distinguished from their congeners
by having their legs covered with soft downy feathers down
to their toes. They are no songsters ; but twitter in a pretty
inward soft manner in their nests. During the time of
breeding, they are often greatly molested with fleas.1
1 Allusion has been already made to the parasites of swallows in the
previous letter, p. 180, and some further remarks on the subject will be
found later on in Letters XX. and XXI. Should the reader be curious
to learn something more of these singular insects, reference may be made
with advantage to Denny's "• Monographia Anoplnrorum Britannia," an
essay on the British species of parasitic insects. — ED.
186 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XVII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
RIKGMEB, near LEWES, Dec. 9, 1773.
RECEIVED your last favour just as I was
setting out for this place, and aui pleased to
find that my monography met with your
approbation. My remarks are the result of
many years' observation ; and are, I trust,
true in the whole: though I do not pretend to say that they
are perfectly void of mistake, or that a more nice observer
might jiot make many additions, since subjects of this kind
are inexhaustible.
If you think my letter worthy the notice of your respect-
able society, you are at liberty to lay it before them ; and
they will consider it, I hope, as it was intended, as an
humble attempt to promote a more minute inquiry into
natural history ; into the life and conversation of animals.
Perhaps hereafter I may be induced to take the house
swallow under consideration ; and from that proceed to the
rest of the British Hirundincs.
Though I have now travelled the Sussex downs upwards
of thirty years, yet I still investigate that chain of majestic
mountains with fresh admiration year by year ; and think I
see new beauties every time I traverse it. This range,
which runs from Chichester eastward as far as East-Bourn,
is about sixty miles in length, and is called the South
Downs, properly speaking, only round Lewes. As you
pass along you command a noble view of the wild, or
weald, on one hand, and the broad downs and sea on tht.
other. Mr. Ray used to visit a family1 just at the foot of
these hills, and was so ravished with the prospect from
Plumpton Plain, near Lewes, that he mentions those scapes
Mr. Courthope, of Danny. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 187
in his " Wisdom of God in the Works of the Creation" with
the utmost satisfaction, and thinks them equal to any thing
he had seen in the finest parts of Europe.
For my own part, I think there is somewhat peculiarly
sweet and amusing in the shapely figured aspect of chalk
hills, in preference to those of stone, which are rugged,
broken, abrupt, and shapeless.
Perhaps I may be singular in my opinion, and not so
happy as to convey to you the same idea; but I never con-
template these mountains without thinking I perceive
somewhat analogous to growth in their gentle swellings
and smooth fungus-like protuberances, their fluted sides,
and regular hollows and slopes, that carry at once the air of
vegetative dilatation and expansion. Or was there ever a
time when these immense masses of calcareous matter were
thrown into fermentation by some adventitious moisture ;
were raised and leavened into such shapes by some plastic
power; and so made to swell and heave their broad backs
into the sky so much above the less animated clay of the
wild below ?
By what I can guess from the admeasurements of the
hills that have been taken round my house, I should sup-
pose that these hills surmount the wild, at an average, at
about the rate of five hundred feet.
One thing is very remarkable as to the sheep: from the
westward till you get to the river Adur all the flocks have
horns, and smooth white faces, and white legs ; and a horn-
less sheep is rarely to be seen : but as soon as you pass that
river eastward, and mount Seeding Hill, all the flocks at once
become hornless, or, as they call them, poll sheep ; and
have moreover black faces, with a white tuft of wool on
their foreheads, and speckled and spotted legs : so that you
would think that the flocks of Laban were pasturing on
one side of the stream, and the variegated breed of his son-
in-law Jacob were cantoned along on the other. And this
diversity holds good respectively on each side from tho
valley of Bramber and Beeding to the eastward, and west-
ward all the whole length of the downs. If you talk with
the shepherds on this subject, they tell you that the case
188 NATURAL HISTORY
has been so from time immemorial ; and smile at your sim-
plicity if you ask them whether the situation of these two
different breeds might not be reversed. However, an
intelligent friend of mine near Chi Chester is determined to
try the experiment ; and has this autumn, at the hazard of
being laughed at, introduced a parcel of black-faced horn-
less rams among his horned western ewes. The black-faced
poll sheep have the shortest legs and the finest wool.1
As I had hardly ever before travelled these downs at so
late a season of the year, I was determined to keep as sharp
a look-out as possible so near the southern coast, with
respect to the summer short- winged birds of passage. We
make great inquiries concerning the withdrawing of the
swallow kind, without examining enough into the causes
why this tribe is never to be seen in winter ; for entre nous,
the disappearing of the latter is more marvellous than that
of the former, and much more unaccountable. The
Hirundines, if they please, are certainly capable of migra-
tion ; and yet, no doubt, are often found in a torpid state :
but redstarts, nightingales, whitethroats, blackcaps, &c. &c.
are very ill provided for long flights ; have never been once
found, as I ever heard of, in a torpid state ; and yet can
never be supposed, in such troops, from year to year to
dodge and elude the eyes of the curious and inquisitive,
which from day to day discern the other small birds that
are known to abide our winters. But, notwithstanding all
my care, I saw nothing like a summer bird of passage :
and, what is more strange, not one wheatear, though they
abound so in the autumn as to be a considerable perquisite
1 In a note to this passage, Mr. Bennett says : — " To assert that
the black-faced, hornless race of sheep, known as South Downs, can
exist westward of the river Adur, would be superfluous : they are not
only to be seen on the downs to the west of Bramber, but everywhere
throughout England ; so strongly have they been recommended to
general favour by their short legs and their fine wool. The Dorsets, as
they are called, the horned sheep with smooth white faces and white
legs, now occur much more rarely than the rival breed. Yet the
observation in the text is curious, as indicating the rapid advance that
has taken place, in little more than half a century, in the knowledge
and power of the agriculturist." — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 189
to the shepherds that take them ; and though many are to
be seen to my knowledge all the winter through in many
parts of the south of England. The most intelligent shep-
herds tell me that some few of these birds appear on the
downs in March, and then withdraw to breed, probably, in
warrens and stone-quarries : now and then a nest is
ploughed up in a fallow on the downs under a furrow, but
it is thought a rarity. At the time of wheat harvest, they
begin to be taken in great numbers ; are sent for sale in
vast quantities to Brighthelmstone and Tunbridge ; and
appear at the tables of all the gentry that entertain with
any degree of elegance. About Michaelmas they retire,
and are seen no more till March. Though these birds are,
when in season, in great plenty on the South downs round
Lewes, yet at East-Bourn, which is the eastern extremity
of those downs, they abound much more. One thing is
very remarkable — that though in the height of the season
so many hundreds of dozens are taken, yet they never are
seen to flock ; and it is a rare thing to see more than three
or four at a time : so that there must be a perpetual flitting
and constant progressive succession. It does not appear
that any wheatears are taken to the westward of Houghton
Bridge, which stands on the river Arun.1
I did not fail to look particularly after my new migration
of ring-ousels ; and to take notice whether they continued
on the downs to this season of the year ; as I had formerly
remarked them in the month of October all the way from
Chich ester to Lewes wherever there were any shrubs and
covert : but not one bird of this sort came within my
observation. I only saw a few larks and whinchats, some
rooks, and several kites and buzzards.
About Midsummer a flight of crossbills comes to the pine-
groves about this house, but never makes any long stay.
1 This is a mistake. We have seen them frequently in spring on the
downs above Chichester, and, in autumn, on the low-lying ground between
Bognor and Selsea Bill. Several pairs breed annually on the downs
near Uppark, in the parish of Harting, which is within a few miles of
the borders of Hants, and not very far from Selborne. This observation
we have had an opportunity of verifying during the present summer. — ED.
190 NATURAL HISTORY
The old tortoise, that I have mentioned in a former
letter, still continues in this garden; and retired under
ground about the 20th of November, and came out again
for one day on the 30th : it lies now buried in a wet
swampy border under a wall facing to the south, and is
enveloped at present in mud, and mire !
Here is a large rookery round this house, the inhabitants
of which seem to get their livelihood very easily ; for they
spend the greatest part of the day on their nest-trees when
the weather is mild. These rooks retire every evening all
the winter from this rookery, where they only call by the
way, as they are going to roost in deep woods : at the dawn
of day they always revisit their nest- trees, and are preceded
a few minutes by a flight of daws, that act, as it were, as
their harbingers.
LETTER XVIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Jan. 29, 1774.
: HE house swallow, or chimney swallow, is, un-
undoubtedly, the first comer of all the British
Hirundines ; and appears in general on or
about the 13th of April, as I have remarked
from many years' observation. Not but now
and then a straggler is seen much earlier : and, in particular,
when I was a boy, I observed a swallow for a whole day
together on a sunny warm Shrove Tuesday ; which day could
not fall out later than the middle of March, and oflen hap-
pened early in February.
It is worth remarking that these birds are seen first about
lakes and mill-ponds ; and it is also very particular, that if
these early visitors happen to find frost and snow, as was
the case of the two dreadful springs of 1770 and 1771, they
immediately withdraw1 for a time. A circumstance this,
1 It has been remarked by the Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert that it
OF SELBOENE. 191
much more in favour of hiding than migration ; since it is
much more probable that a bird should retire to its hyber-
naculum just at hand, than return for a week or two only to
warmer latitudes.
The swallow, though called the chimney-swallow, by no
means builds altogether in chimneys, but often within
barns and outhouses against the rafters ; and so she did in
Virgil's time:
" Ante ....
Oarrula quam tignis nidos suspendat hirundo."
In Sweden she builds in barns, and is called ladu wcala,,
the barn-swallow. Besides, in the warmer parts of Europe
there are no chimneys to houses except they are English-
built : in these countries she constructs her nest in porches,
and gateways, and galleries, and open halls.
Here and there a bird may affect some odd, peculiar
place ; as we have known a swallow build down the shaft
of an old well, through which chalk had been formerly
drawn up for the purpose of manure : but in general with
us this Hirundo breeds in chimneys ; and loves to haunt
those stacks where there is a constant fire, no doubt for the
sake of warmth. Not that it can subsist in the immediate
shaft where there is a fire ; but prefers one adjoining to that
of the kitchen, and disregards the perpetual smoke of that
funnel, as I have often observed with some degree of
wonder.
Five or six or more feet down the chimney, does this little
bird begin to form her nest about the middle of May, which
consists, like that of the house martin, of a crust or shell
composed of dirt or mud, mixed with short pieces of straw,
to render it tough and permanent ; with this difference, that
whereas the shell of the martin is nearly hemispheric, that
of the swallow is open at the top, and like half a deep dish :
this nest is lined with fine grasses, and feathers which are
often collected as they float in the air.
is very doubtful whether the swallows which appear unseasonably for a
few days do not perish when they are said to withdraw. " I do not
see," he says, " how they are identified when they are supposed to re-
appear in due time." — ED.
192 NATURAL HISTORY
Wonderful is the address which this adroit bird shows all
day long in ascending and descending with security through
so narrow a pass. When hovering over the mouth of the
funnel, the vibrations of her wings acting on the confined
air occasion a rumbling like thunder. It is not improbable
that the dam submits to this inconvenient situation so low
in the shaft, in order to secure her broods from rapacious
birds, and particularly from owls, which frequently fall
down chimneys, perhaps in attempting to get at these
nestlings.
The swallow lays from four to six white eggs, dotted with
red specks ; and brings out her first brood about the last
week in June, or the first week in July. The progressive
method by which the young are introduced into life is very
amusing : first, they emerge from the shaft with difficulty
enough, and often fall down into the rooms below : for a
day or so they are fed on the chimney-top, and then are
conducted to the dead leafless bough of some tree, where,
sitting in a row, they are attended with great assiduity, and
may then be called perch ers. In a day or two more they
become flyers, but are still unable to take their own food ;
therefore they play about near the place where the dams
are hawking for flies ; and, when a mouthful is collected, at
a certain signal given, the dam and the nestling advance,
rising towards each other, and meeting at an angle; the
young one all the while uttering such a little quick note of
gratitude and complacency, that a person must have paid
very little regard to the wonders of Nature that has not
often remarked this feat.
The dam betakes herself immediately to the business of a
second brood as soon as she is disengaged from her first ;
which at once associates with the first broods of house mar-
tins ; and with them congregates, clustering on sunny roofs,
towers, and trees. This Hirundo brings out her second
brood towards the middle and end of August.
All the summer long is the swallow a most instructive
pattern of unwearied industry and affection ; for, from
morning to night, while there is a family to be supported,
she spends the whole day in skimming close to the ground,
OF SELBOENE. 193
and exerting the most sudden turns and quick evolutions.
Avenues, and long walks under hedges, and pasture fields,
and mown meadows where cattle graze, are her delight,
especially if there are trees interspersed ; because in such
spots insects most abound. When a fly is taken a smart
snap from her bill is heard, resembling the noise at the
shutting of a watchcase ; but the motion of the mandibles
is too quick for the eye.
The swallow, probably the male bird, is the excubitor to
house martins, and other little birds, announcing the ap-
proach of birds of prey. For as soon as a hawk appears,
with a shrill alarming note he calls all the swallows and
martins about him ; who pursue in a body, and buffet and
strike their enemy till they have driven him from the vil-
lage, darting down from above on his back, and rising in
a perpendicular line in perfect security. This bird also will
sound the alarm, and strike at cats when they climb on the
roofs of houses, or otherwise approach the nests. Each
species of Hirundo drinks as it flies along, sipping the sur-
face of the water ; but the swallow alone, in general, washes
on the wing, by dropping into a pool for many times to-
gether: in very hot weather house martins and bank martins
dip and wash a little.
The swallow is a delicate songster, and in soft sunny
weather sings both perching and flying; on trees in a kind
of concert, and on chimney tops : is also a bold flyer, ranging
to distant downs and commons even in windy weather,
which the other species seem much to dislike ; nay, even
frequenting exposed seaport towns, and making little ex-
cursions over the salt water. Horsemen on wide downs are
often closely attended by a little party of swallows for miles
together, which plays before and behind them, sweeping
around, and collecting all the skulking insects that are
roused by the trampling of the horses' feet, when the wind
blows hard ; without this expedient, they are often forced
to settle to pick up their lurking prey.
This species feeds much on little Coleoptera, as well as
on gnats and flies; and often settles on dug ground, or
o
194 NATURAL HISTORY
paths, for gravels to grind and digest its food. Before
they depart, for some weeks, to a bird, they forsake
houses and chimneys, and roost in trees ; and usually with-
draw about the beginning of October; though some few
stragglers may appear on at times till the first week in
November.
Some few pairs haunt the new and open streets of
London next the fields, but do not enter, like the house
martin, the close and crowded parts of the city.
Both male and female are distinguished from their con-
geners by the length and forkedness of their tails. They
are undoubtedly the most nimble of all the species; and
when the male pursues the female in amorous chase, they
then go beyond their usual speed, and exert a rapidity
almost too quick for the eye to follow.
After this circumstantial detail of the life and discerning
a-Topyy of the swallow, I shall add, for your farther amuse-
ment, an anecdote or two not much in favour of her
sagacity : —
A certain swallow built for two years together on the
handles of a pair of garden shears, that were stuck up
against the boards in an outhouse, and therefore must have
her nest spoiled whenever that implement was wanted:
and, what is stranger still, another bird of the same species
built its nest on the wings and body of an owl that hap-
pened by accident to hang dead and dry from the rafter of
a barn. This owl, with the nest on its wings, and with
eggs in the nest, was brought as a curiosity worthy the
most elegant private museum in Great Britain. The
owner, struck with the oddity of the sight, furnished the
bringer with a large shell, or conch, desiring him to fix it
just where the owl hung : the person did as he was ordered,
and the following year a pair, probably the same pair, built
their nest in the conch, and laid their eggs.1
The owl and the conch make a strange grotesque appear-
1 This anecdote is related, almost in the same words, and evidently
originally from the same pen, in Barring ton's " Miscellanies,"
p. 240. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 195
ance, and are not the least curious specimens in that
wonderful collection of art and nature.1
Thus is instinct in animals, taken the least out of its way,
an undistinguishing, limited faculty ; and blind to every
circumstance that does not immediately respect self-pre-
servation, or lead at once to the propagation or support of
their species.
LETTER XIX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTOX.
SKIBORNE, Feb. 14, 1774.
RECEIVED your favour of the eighth, and
am pleased to find that you read my little
history of the swallow with your usual can-
dour : nor was I the less pleased to find that
you made objections where you saw reason.
As to the quotations, it is difficult to say precisely which
species of Hirundo Virgil might intend in the lines in
question, since the ancients did not attend to specific
differences like modern naturalists ; yet somewhat may be
gathered, enough to incline me to suppose that in the two
passages quoted, the poet had his eye on the swallow.
In the first place the epithet garrula suits the swallow well,
who is a great songster ; and not the martin, which is rather a
mute bird ; and when it sings is so inward as scarce to be
heard. Besides, if tignum in that place signifies a rafter
rather than a beam, as it seems to me to do, then I think ifc
must be the swallow that is alluded to, and not the martin ;
since the former does frequently build within the roof
against the rafters ; while the latter always, as far as I have
been able to observe, builds without the roof against eaves
and cornices.
As to the simile, too much stress must not be laid on it ;
1 Sir Asi/on Lever's Museum, since dispersed, see p. 8, note. — ED.
196 NATURAL HISTORY
yet the epithet nigra speaks plainly in favour of the swallow,
whose back and wings are very black ; while the rump of
the martin is milk-white, its back and wings blue, and all
its under part white as snow. JNTor can the clumsy mo-
tions (comparatively clumsy) of the martin well represent the
sudden and artful evolutions and quick turns which Juturna
gave to her brother's chariot, so as to elude the eager
pursuit of the enraged ^Eneas. The verb sonat also seems
to imply a bird that is somewhat loquacious.1
We have had a very wet autumn and winter, so as to
raise the springs to a pitch beyond any thing since 1764 ;
which was a remarkable year for floods and high waters.
The land springs, which we call lavants, break out much on
the downs of Sussex, Hampshire, and Wiltshire. The
country people say, when the lavants rise, corn will always
be dear; meaning that when the earth is so glutted with
water as to send forth springs on the downs and uplands,
that the corn vales must be drowned ; and so it has proved
for these ten or eleven years past. For land springs have
never obtained more since the memory of man than during
that period ; nor has there been known a greater scarcity of
all sorts of grain, considering the great improvements of
modern husbandry. Such a run of wet seasons a century
or two ago, would, I am persuaded, have occasioned a
famine. Therefore pamphlets and newspaper letters, that
talk of combinations, tend to inflame and mislead ; since we
must not expect plenty till Providence sends us more
favourable seasons.
The wheat of last year, all round this district, and in the
county of Rutland, and elsewhere, yields remarkably bad •
and our wheat on the ground, by the continual late sudden
vicissitudes from fierce frost to pouring rains, looks poorly ;
and the turnips rot very fast.
" Nigra velut magnas domini cnm divitis aedes
Pervolat, ct pennis alta atria lustrat hirundo,
Pabula parva legens, nidisque loquacibus escas :
Et mine porticibus vacuis, nunc humida circum
Stagna sonat." G. \V.
OF SELBORNE. 197
LETTER XX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTOS.
SELBORNE, Feb. 26, 1774.
HE sand martin, or bank martin, is by
much the least of any of the British Hirun-
dines ; and as far as we have ever seen, the
smallest known Hirundo : though Brisson
asserts that there is one much smaller, and
that is the Hirundo csculenta.
But it is much to be regretted that it is scarce possible
for any observer to be so full and exact as he could wish in
reciting the circumstances attending the life and conversa-
tion of this little bird, since it is f era natura, at least in this
part of the kingdom, disclaiming all domestic attachments,
and haunting wild heaths and commons where there are
large lakes ; while the other species, especially the swallow
and house martin, are remarkably gentle and domesticated,
and never seem to think themselves safe but under the pro-
tection of man.
Here are in this parish, in the sand pits and banks of the
lakes of Wolrner Forest, several colonies of these birds ; and
yet they are never seen in the village ; nor do they at all
frequent the cottages that are scattered about in that wild
district. The only instance I ever remember where this
species haunts any building is at the town of Bishop's Wal-
tham, in this county, where many sand martins nestle and
breed in the scaffold holes of the back wall of William of
Wykeham's stables: but then this wall stands in a very
sequestered and retired enclosure, and faces upon a large
and beautiful lake. And indeed this species seems so to
delight in large waters, that no instance occurs of their
K>8 NATURAL HISTORY
abounding, but near vast pools or rivers ; and in particular
it has been remarked that they swarm in the banks of the
Thames in some places below London bridge.
It is curious to observe with what different degrees of
architectonic skill Providence has endowed birds of the same
genus, and so nearly correspondent in their general mode
of life ! for while the swallow and the house martin discover
the greatest address in raising and securely fixing crusts or
shells of loam as cunabula for their young, the bank martin
terebrates a round and regular hole in the sand or earth,
which is serpentine, horizontal, and about two feet deep.
SAND MARTINS COLONY AT OAKHANGER.
At the inner end of this burrow does this bird deposit, in a
good degree of safety, her rude nest, consisting of fine
grasses and feathers, usually goose feathers, very inartifi-
cially laid together.
Perseverance will accomplish any thing : though at first
one would be disinclined to believe that this weak bird, with
her soft and tender bill and claws, should ever be able to
bore the stubborn sand bank without entirely disabling
herself; yet with these feeble instruments have I seen a pair
of them make great dispatch ; and could remark how much
they had scooped that day by the fresh sand which ran down
OF SELBORNE. 199
the bank, and was of a different colour from that which lay
loose and bleached in the sun.
In what space of time these little artists are able to mine
and finish these cavities I have never been able to discover,
for reasons given above ; but it would be a matter worthy
of observation, where it falls in the way of any naturalist to
make his remarks. This I have often taken notice of, that
several holes of different depths are left unfinished at the
end of summer. To imagine that these beginnings
were intentionally made in order to be in the greater for-
wardness for next spring, is allowing perhaps too much fore-
sight and rerum prudentia to a simple bird. May not the
cause of these latebrce being left unfinished arise from their
SAND MARTIN S NEST.
meeting in those places with strata too harsh, hard, and
solid, for their purpose, which they relinquish, and go to a
fresh spot that works more freely? Or may they not in
other places fall in with a soil as much too loose and mould-
ering, liable to founder, and threatening to overwhelm them
and their labours ?
One thing is remarkable — that, after some years, the old
holes are forsaken and new ones bored ; perhaps because
the old habitations grow foul and fetid from long use, or
because they may so abound with fleas as to become unten-
antable. This species of swallow moreover is strangely
annoyed with fleas : and we have seen fleas, bed fleas (Pulex
200 NATURAL HISTORY
irritans1) , swarming at the mouths of these holes, like bees
011 the stools of their hives.
The following circumstance should by no means be
omitted — that these birds do not make use of their caverns
by way of hybernacula, as might be expected ; since banks
so perforated have been dug out with care in the winter,
when nothing was found but empty nests.
The sand martin arrives much about the same time with
the swallow, and lays, as she does, from four to six white
eggs. But as this species is cryptogame, carrying on the
business of nidification, incubation, and the support of its
young in the dark, it would not be so easy to ascertain the
time of breeding, were it not for the coming forth of the
broods, which appear much about the time, or rather some-
what earlier than those of the swallow The nestlings are
supported, in common like those of their congeners, with
gnats and other small insects ; and sometimes they are fed
with LibelluloB (dragon- flies) almost as long as themselves.
In the last week in June we have seen a row of these sitting
on a rail near a great pool as perchers, and so young and
helpless as easily to be taken by hand ; but whether the
dams ever feed them on the wing, as swallows and house
martins do, we have never yet been able to determine ; nor
do we know whether they pursue and attack birds of prey.
When they happen to breed near hedges and enclosures,
they are dispossessed of their breeding holes by the house
sparrow, which is on the same account a fell adversary to
house martins.
These Hirundines are no songsters, but rather mute,
making only a little harsh noise when a person approaches
their nests. They seem not to be of a sociable turn, never
with us congregating with their congeners in the autumn.
Undoubtedly they breed a second time, like the house mar-
tin and swallow ; and withdraw about Michaelmas.
1 The flea of the sand martin, although so similar to the bed flea as to
be scarcely distinguishable from it, is really distinct. It appears even
to be distinct from the flea of the swallow, Pulex Mrundinis (Stephens),
and has been described as P. bifasciatus (Curtis). — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 201
Though in some particular districts they may happen to
abound, yet in the whole, in the south of England at least,
is this much the rarest species. For there are few towns
or large villages but what abound with house martins ; few
churches, towers, or steeples but what are haunted by some
swifts ; scarce a hamlet or single cottage chimney that has
not its swallow ; while the bank martins, scattered here and
there, live a sequestered life among some abrupt sand hills,
and in the banks of some few rivers.
These birds have a peculiar manner of flying; flitting
about with odd jerks and vacillations, not unlike the motions
of a butterfly. Doubtless the flight of all Hirundines is
influenced by and adapted to the peculiar sort of insects
which furnish their food. Hence, it would be worth inquiry
to examine what particular genus of insects afford s the prin-
cipal food of each respective species of swallow.
Notwithstanding what has been advanced above, some
few sand martins, I see, haunt the skirts of London, fre-
quenting the dirty pools in St. George's Fields, and about
Whitechapel. The question is where these build, since
there are no banks or bold shores in that neighbourhood :
perhaps they nestle in the scaffold-holes of some old or new
deserted building. They dip and wash as they fly some-
times, like the house martin and swallow.
Sand martins differ from their congeners in the diminutive-
ness of their size and in their colour, which is what is usu-
ally called a mouse colour. Near Valencia, in Spain, they
are taken, says Willughby, and sold in the markets for the
table ; and are called by the country people, probably from
their desultory jerking manner of flight, Papilion di mon-
tagna.1
1 Mr. Howard Saunders, in his " List of the Birds of Southern Spain "
("Ibis," 1871, p. 205), says: — "To my surprise I found this species
nesting in the banks of the Guadalquivir in May. I had imagined it was
a more noithern breeder." — ED
202 NATURAL HISTOEJ
\
LETTER XXI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Sept. 28, 1774.
S the swift or black martin is the largest of
the British Hirundines, so is it undoubtedly
the latest comer. For I remember but one
instance of its appearing before the last week
in April ; and in some of our late frosty,
harsh springs, it has not been seen till the beginning of
May. This species usually arrives in pairs.
The swift, like the sand martin, is very defective in archi-
tecture, making no crust or shell for its nest ; but forming
it of dry grasses and feathers, very rudely and inartificially
put together. With all my attention to these birds, I have
never been able once to discover one in the act of collecting
or carrying in materials ; so that I have suspected (since
their nests are exactly the same) that they sometimes usurp
upon the house-sparrows, and expel them, as sparrows do
the house and sand martin, well remembering that I have
seen them squabbling together at the entrance of their holes,
and the sparrows up in arms, and much disconcerted at
these intruders. And yet I am assured by a nice observer
in such matters, that they do collect feathers for their nests
in Andalusia ; and that he has shot them with such mate-
rials in their mouths.
Swifts, like sand martins, carry on the business of nidifi-
cation quite in the dark, in crannies of castles, and towers,
and steeples, and upon the tops of the walls of churches
under the roof; and therefore cannot be so narrowly watched
as those species that build more openly ; but, from what I
could ever observe, they begin nesting about the middle of
May; and I have remarked, from eggs taken, that they have
sat hard by the 9th of June. In general they haunt tall
buildings, churches, and steeples, and breed only in such : yet
OF SELBOENE. 203
in this village some pairs frequent the lowest and meanest
cottages, and educate their young under those thatched
roofs. We remember but one instance where they breed
out of buildings ; and that is in the sides of a deep chalk-pit
near the town of Odiham, in this county, where we have
seen many pairs entering the crevices, and skimming and
squeaking round the precipices.
As I have regarded these amusive birds with no small
attention, if I should advance something new and peculiar
with respect to them, and different from all other birds, I
might perhaps be credited, especially as my assertion is the
result of many years' exact observation. The fact that I
would advance is, that swifts pair on the wing ; and I would
wish any nice observer, that is startled at this supposition,
to use his own eyes, and I think he will soon be convinced.
In another class of animals, viz. the insect, nothing is so
common as to see the different species of many genera pair-
ing as they fly. The swift is almost continually on the wing;
and as it never settles on the ground, on trees, or roofs,
would seldom find opportunity for pairing, except in the
air. If any person would watch these birds of a fine morn-
ing in May, as they are sailing round at a great height from
the ground, he would see, every now and then, two meet,
and both of them sink down together for many fathoms
with a loud piercing shriek.
As the swift eats, drinks, collects materials for its nest,
and, as it seems, propagates on the wing, it appears to live
more in the air than any other bird, and to perform all
functions there save those of sleeping and incubation.
This Hirundo differs widely from its congeners in laying
invariably but two eggs at a time,1 which are milk-white,
long, and peaked at the small end; whereas the other
species lay at each brood from four to six. It is a most alert
bird, rising very early, and retiring to roost very late, and
is on the wing in the height of summer at least sixteen
hours. In the longest days it does not withdraw to rest till
1 We have occasionally found three eggs in a nest, and these were
taken from under the eaves of some old cottages in TVest Sussex. — ED.
204 NATURAL HISTORY
a quarter before nine in the evening, being the latest of all
day birds. Just before they retire, whole groups of them
assemble high in the air, and squeak, and shoot about with
wonderful rapidity. But this bird is never so much alive
as in sultry thundry weather, when it expresses great alac-
rity, and calls forth all its powers. In hot mornings,
several, getting together in little parties, dash round the
steeples and churches, squeaking as they go in a very
clamorous manner : these, by nice observers, are supposed
to be males serenading their sitting hens ; and not without
reason, since they seldom squeak till they come close to the
walls or eaves, and since those within utter at the same time
a little inward note of complacency.
When the hen has sat hard all day, she rushes forth just
as it is almost dark, and stretches and relieves her weary
limbs, and snatches a scanty meal for a few minutes, and
then returns to her duty of incubation. Swifts, when wan-
tonly and cruelly shot while they have young, discover a
little lump of insects in their mouths, which they pouch and
hold under their tongue. In general they feed in a much
higher district than the other species : a proof that gnats
and other insects do also abound to a considerable height in
the air : they also range to vast distances ; since locomotion
is no labour to them, who are endowed with such wonderful
powers of wing. Their powers seem to be in proportion to
their levers ; and their wings are longer in proportion than
those of almost any other bird. When they mute, or ease
themselves in flight, they raise their wings, and make them
meet over their backs.
At some certain times in the summer I had remarked
that swifts were hawking very low for hours together over
pools and streams; and could not help inquiring into the
object of their pursuit that induced them to descend so
much below their usual range. After some trouble, I found
that they were taking Phryganea, Ephemera, and Libellulce
(cadew-flies, may-flies, and dragon-flies), that were just
emerged out of their aurelia state. I then no longer won-
dered that they should be so willing to stoop for a prey that
afforded them such plentiful and succulent nourishment.
OF SELBORNE. 205
They bring out their young about the middle or latter
end of July : but as these never become perchers, nor, that
ever I could discern, are fed on the wing by their dams, the
coming forth of the young is not so notorious as in the
other species.
On the 30th of last June I untiled the eaves of a house
where many pairs build, and found in each nest only two
squab, naked pulli : on the 8th of July I repeated the same
inquiry, and found they had made very little progress to-
wards a fledged state, but were still naked and helpless.
From whence we may conclude that birds whose way of life
keeps them perpetually on the wing, would not be able to
quit their nest till the end of the month. Swallows and
martins, that have numerous families, are continually feeding
them every two or three minutes; while swifts, that have
but two young to maintain, are much at their leisure, and
do not attend on their nests for hours together.
Sometimes they pursue and strike at hawks that come in
their way; but not with that vehemence and fury that
swallows express on the same occasion. They are out all
day long in wet days, feeding about, and disregarding still
rain : from whence two things may be gathered ; first, that
many insects abide high in the air, even in rain ; and next,
that the feathers of these birds must be well preened to resist
so much wet. Windy, and particularly windy weather with
heavy showers, they dislike; and on such days withdraw,
and are scarce ever seen.
There is a circumstance respecting the colour of swifts,
which seems not to be unworthy our attention. When they
arrive in the spring they are all over of a glossy, dark soot
colour, except their chins, which are white ; but by being
all day long in the sun and air, they become quite weather-
beaten and bleached before they depart,1 and yet they return
glossy again in the spring. Now, if they pursue the sun
1 Yarrell has remarked, that our swift departs before its moult, and
when its plumage is at the worst from wear and tear. Our summer
visitors generally complete their moult before they leave us, but not the
Hirundinida. See also foot-note, p. 172. — ED.
206 NATURAL HISTORY
into lower latitudes, as some suppose, in order to enjoy a
perpetual summer, why do they not return bleached ? Do
they not rather, perhaps, retire to rest for a season, and at
that juncture moult and change their feathers, since all
other birds are known to moult soon after the season of
breeding.
Swifts are very anomalous in many particulars, dissenting
from all their congeners not only in the number of their
young, but in breeding but once in a summer ; whereas all
the other British Hirundines breed invariably twice. It is
past all doubt that swifts can breed but once, since they
withdraw in a short time after the flight of their young, and
some time before their congeners bring out their second
broods. We may here .remark, that, as swifts breed but
once in a summer, and only two at a time, and the other
Hirundines twice, the latter, who lay from four to six eggs,
increase at an average five times as fast as the former.
But in nothing are swifts more singular than in their
early retreat. They retire, as to the main body of them,
by the 10th of August, and sometimes a few days sooner:
and every straggler invariably withdraws by the 20th, while
their congeners, all of them, stay till the beginning of
October ; many of them all through that month, and some
occasionally to the beginning of November. This early
retreat is mysterious and wonderful, since that time is often
the sweetest season in the year. But, what is more extra-
ordinary, they begin to retire still earlier in the most
southerly parts of Andalusia, where they can be no ways
influenced by any defect of heat ; or, as one might suppose,
defect of food. Are they regulated in their motions with us
by a failure of food, or by a propensity to moulting, or by a
disposition to rest after so rapid a life, or by what ? This
is one of those incidents in natural history that not only
baffles our researches, but almost eludes our guesses !
These Hirundines never perch on trees or roofs, and so
never congregate with their congeners. They are fearless
while haunting their nesting places, and are not to be scared
with a gun, and are often beaten down with poles and
cudgels as they stoop to go under the eaves. Swifts are
OF SELBORNE. 207
infested with those pests to the genus called Hippo-
boscce hirundinis ; and often wriggle and scratch them selves ,
in their flight, to get rid of that clinging annoyance.
Swifts are no songsters, and have only one harsh
screaming note : yet there are ears to which it is not
displeasing, from an agreeable association of ideas, since
that note never occurs but in the most lovely summer
weather.
They never settle on the ground but through accident;
and when down can hardly rise, on account of the shortness
of their legs and the length of their wings : neither can
they walk, but only crawl ; but they have a strong grasp
with their feet, by which they cling to walls. Their bodies
being flat they can enter a very narrow crevice ; and where
they cannot pass on their bellies they will turn up edge-
wise.
The particular formation of the foot discriminates the
swift from all the British Hirundines ; and indeed from all
other known birds, the Hirundo melba, or great white-
bellied swift of Gibraltar, excepted; for it is so disposed
as to carry " omnes quatuor digitos anticos," all its four toes
forward ; besides, the least toe, which should be the back
toe, consists of one bone alone, and the other three only of
two apiece : a construction most rare and peculiar, but nicely
adapted to the purposes in which their feet are employed.
This, and some peculiarities attending the nostrils and
under mandible, have induced a discerning naturalist l to
suppose that this species might constitute a genus per S6?
In London a party of swifts frequents the Tower, playing
1 John Antony Scopoli, of Carniola, M.D. — G. W.
2 The genus suggested by Scopoli has been adopted by modern
zoologists, and has been made to include all the species of swifts : but
the name which he gave to it has been superseded by that of Cypseius,
applied to it by Illiger and adopted from Aristotle, which is considered
as indicating the habit of hiding their nests in holes.
The great white-bellied swift above referred to, an inhabitant of
Central and Southern Europe, Western Asia, and Africa, is an occasional
straggler to our shores. Since the days of Gilbert White a score of
instances have been recorded of its occurrence in the British Islands.
See the "Handbook of British Birds," p. 125. — ED.
208 NATURAL HISTORY
and feeding over the river just below the bridge : others
haunt some of the churches of the Borough next the fields ;
but do not venture, like the house martin, into the close
crowded part of the town.
The Swedes have bestowed a very pertinent name on
this swallow, calling it ring-swala, from the perpetual rings
or circles that it takes round the scene of its nidification.
Swifts feed on Qoleoptera, or small beetles with hard
cases over their wings, as well as on the softer insects ;
but it does not appear how they can procure gravel1 to
grind their food, as swallows do, since they never settle on
the ground. Young ones, overrun with Hippoboscce, are
sometimes found, under their nests, fallen to the ground ;
the number of vermin rendering their abode insupportable
any longer. They frequent in this village several abject
cottages ; yet a succession still haunts the same unlikely
roofs : a good proof this that the same birds return to the
same spots. As they must stoop very low to get up under
these humble eaves, cats lie in wait, and sometimes catch
them on the wing.
On the 5th of July, 1775, I again untiled part of a roof
over the nest of a swift. The dam sat in the nest ; but so
strongly was she affected by natural (rropyy for her brood,
which she supposed to be in danger, that, regardless of her
own safety, she would not stir, but lay sullenly by them,
permitting herself to be taken in hand. The squab
young we brought down and placed on the grass-plot,
where they tumbled about, and were as helpless as a new-
born child. While we contemplated their naked bodies,
their unwieldy disproportioned abdomina, and their heads,
too heavy for their necks to support, we could not but
wonder when we reflected that these shiftless beings in a
little more than a fortnight would be able to dash through
the air almost with the inconceivable swiftness of a meteor ;
1 Very few of the soft-billed birds eat gravel, and we are inclined to
think that the particles of grit found in the stomachs of swallows have
found their way there accidentally whilst the birds have been collecting
mud for their nests. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 209
and, perhaps, in their emigration, must traverse vast conti-
nents and oceans as distant as the equator. So soon does
Nature advance small birds to their *iXixi'a, or state of per-
fection; while the progressive growth of men and large
quadrupeds is slow and tedious !
LETTER XXII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Sept. 13, 1774.
Y means of a straight cottage chimney I
had an opportunity this summer of re*
marking, at my leisure, how swallows ascend
and descend through the shaft : but my
pleasure in contemplating the address with
which this feat was performed to a considerable depth in
the chimney, was somewhat interrupted by apprehensions
lest my eyes might undergo the same fate with those of
Tobit.1
Perhaps it may be some amusement to you to hear at
what times the different species of Hirundines arrived this
spring in three very distant counties of this kingdom.
With us the swallow was seen first on April the 4th, the
swift on April the 24th, the bank martin on April the 12th,
and the house martin not till April the 30th. At South
Zele, Devonshire, swallows did not arrive till April the
25th ; swifts in plenty, on May the 1st; and house martins
not till the middle of May. At Blackburne, in Lancashire,
swifts were seen April the 28th; swallows, April the 29th ;
house martins, May the 1st. Do these different dates in such
distant districts, prove anything for or against migration ?*
1 Tobit, ii. 10.
2 See the " Field Calendar of Ornithology ;" General Report for
1872; published in "The Field" of May 31 and June 7, 1873, and
subsequently reprinted. — ED.
P
210
NATURAL HISTORY
A farmer, near Weyhill, fallows his land with two teams
of asses ; one of which works till noon, and the other in the
afternoon. When these animals have done their work,
they are penned all night, like sheep, on the fallow. In the
winter they are confined and foddered in a yard, and make
plenty of dung.
Linnaeus says, that hawks " paciscuntur inducias cum
avibus, quamdiu cuculus cuculat:" but it appears to me
that, during that period, many little birds are taken and
destroyed by birds of prey, as may be seen by their feathers
left in lanes and under hedges.
The missel- thrash1 is, while breeding, fierce and pugna-
MISSEL-THRUSH.
cious, driving such birds as approach its nest, with great
fury, to a distance. The Welsh call it pen y llwyn, the
head or master of the coppice. He suffers no magpie, jay,
or blackbird, to enter the garden where he haunts ; and is,
for the time, a good guard to the new sown legumens. In
general he is very successful in the defence of his family :
but once I observed in my garden, that several magpies
1 As to the proper mode of spelling the name of this bird, see Pro-
fessor Newton's edition of Yarrell's *' History of British Birds," vol. i.
p. 260, note.— ED.
OF SELBORNE. 211
came determined to storm the nest of a miss el- thrush : the
dams defended their mansion with great vigour, and fought
resolutely pro aris et focis ; but numbers at last prevailed,
they tore the nest to pieces, and swallowed the young alive.
In the season of nidification the wildest birds are compa-
ratively tame. Thus the ring-dove breeds in my fields,
though they are continually frequented; and the missel-
thrush, though most shy and wild in the autumn and winter,
builds in my garden close to a walk where people are pass-
ing all day long.
Wall fruit abounds with me this year; but my grapes,
that used to be forward and good, are at present backward
beyond all precedent: and this is not the worst of the
story ; for the same ungenial weather, the same black cold
solstice, has injured the more necessary fruits of the earth,
and discoloured and blighted our wheat. The crop of hops
promises to be very large.
Frequent returns of deafness incommode me sadly, and
half disqualify me for a naturalist ; for when those fits are
upon me I lose all the pleasing notices and little intima-
tions arising from rural sounds ; and May is to me as silent
and mute with respect to the notes of birds, &c., as August.
My eyesight is, thank God, quick and good; but with
respect to the other sense, I am, at times, disabled :
"And Wisdom at one entrance quite shut out."
LETTER XXIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BAIIRINGTON.
SELCORNE, June 8, 1775.
September the 21st, 1741, being then on a
visit, and intent on field diversions, I rose
before daybreak : when I came into the en-
closures, I found the stubbles and clover-
grounds matted all over with a thick coat of
jobweb, in the meshes of which a copious and heavy dew
212 NATURAL HISTORY
hung so plentifully that the whole face of the country
seemed, as it were, covered with two or three setting-nets
drawn one over another. When the dogs attempted to
hunt, their eyes were so blinded and hoodwinked that they
could not proceed, but were obliged to lie down and scrape
the incumbrances from their faces with their fore feet, so
that, finding my sport interrupted, I returned home musing
in my mind on the oddness of the occurrence.
As the morning advanced the sun became bright and
warm, and the day turned out one of those most lovely ones
which no season but the autumn produces ; cloudless, calm,
serene, and worthy of the south of France itself.
About nine an appearance very unusual began to demand
our attention, a shower of cobwebs falling from very elevated
regions, and continuing without any interruption till the
close of the day. These webs were not single filmy threads,
floating in the air in all directions, but perfect flakes or
rags ; some near an inch broad, and five or six long, which
fell with a degree of velocity, that showed they were con-
siderably heavier than the atmosphere.
On every side as the observer turned his eyes might he
behold a continual succession of fresh flakes falling into his
sight, and twinkling like stars as they turned their sides
towards the sun.
How far this wonderful shower extended would be diffi-
cult to say ; but we know that it reached Bradley, Selborne,
and Alresford, three places which lie in a sort of a triangle,
the shortest of whose sides is about eight miles in extent.
At the second of those places there was a gentleman (for
whose veracity and intelligent turn we have the greatest
veneration) who observed it the moment he got abroad;
but concluded that, as soon as he came upon the hill above
his house, where he took his morning rides, he should be
higher than this meteor, which he imagined might have been
blown like thistle-down from the common above ; but, to
his great astonishment, when he rode to the most elevated
part of the down, 300 feet above his fields, he found the
webs in appearance still as much above him as before, still
descending into sight in a constant succession, and twink-
OF SELBOENE. 213
ling in the sun, so aa to draw the attention of the most
incurious.
Neither before nor after was any such fall observed ; but
on this day the flakes hung in the trees and hedges so thick,
that a diligent person sent out might have gathered baskets
full.
The remark that I shall make on these cobweblike appear-
ances, called gossamer, is that, strange and superstitious
as the notions about them were formerly, nobody in these
days doubts but that they are the real production of small
spiders, which swarm in the fields in fine weather in autumn,
and have a power of shooting out webs from their tails, so
as to render themselves buoyant and lighter than air. But
why these apterous insects should that day take such a
wonderful aerial excursion, and why their webs should at
once become so gross and material as to be considerably
more weighty than air, and to descend with precipitation, is
a matter beyond my skill. If I might be allowed to hazard
a supposition, I should imagine that those filmy threads,
when first shot, might be entangled in the rising dew, and
so drawn up, spiders and all, by a brisk evaporation into
the regions where clouds are formed; and if the spiders
have a power of coiling and thickening their webs in the
air, as Dr. Lister says they have [see his Letters to Mr.
Kay], then, when they were become heavier than the air,
they must fall.
Every day in fine weather, in autumn chiefly, do I see
those spiders shooting out their webs and mounting aloft :
they will go off from your finger if you will take them into
your hand. Lalt summer one alighted on my book as I
was reading in the parlour ; and, running to the top of the
page, and shooting out a web, took its departure from
thence. But what I most wondered at was, that it went
off with considerable velocity in a place where no air was
stirring ; and I am sure that I did not assist it with my
breath : so that these little crawlers seem to have, while
mounting, some locomotive power without the use of wings,
and to move in the air faster than the air itself.
214 NAT VEAL HISTORY
LETTER XXIV.1
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTOX.
SELBORNB, Aug. 15, 1775.
HERE is a wonderful spirit of sociality in the
brute creation, independent of sexual attach-
ment: the congregating of gregarious birds
in the winter is a remarkable instance.
Many horses, though quiet with com-
pany, will not stay one minute in a field by themselves : the
strongest fences cannot restrain them. My neighbour's
horse will not only not stay by himself abroad, but he will
not bear to be left alone in a strange stable without dis-
covering the utmost impatience, and endeavouring to break
the rack and manger with his fore feet : he has been known
to leap out at a stable window, through which dung was
thrown, after company; and yet in other respects is
remarkably quiet. Oxen and cows will not fatten by
themselves ; but will neglect the finest pasture that is not
recommended by society. It would be needless to instance
sheep, which constantly flock together.
But this propensity seems not to be confined to animals
of the same species ; for we know a doe, still alive, that
was brought up from a little fawn with a dairy of cows ;
with them it goes afield, and with them it returns to the
yard. The dogs of the house take no notice of this deer,
being used to her • but, if strange dogs come by, a chase
ensues j while the master smiles to see his favourite
securely leading her pursuers over hedge, or gate, or stile,
till she returns to the cows, who, with fierce lo wings and
1 Barrington has inserted this Letter in his "Miscellanies," p. 251 ;
prefacing it thus : — " I shall here, on this head, subjoin part of a letter
which I have received from my often-mentioned correspondent, the
Rev. Mr. White, of Selborne, in Hampshire." — ED.
OF SELBOMNE. 215
menacing horns, drive the assailants quite out of the
pasture.
Even great disparity of kind and size does not always
prevent social advances and mutual fellowship. For a very
intelligent and observant person has assured me that, in the
former part of his life, keeping but one horse, he happened
also on a time to have but one solitary hen. These two
incongruous animals spent much of their time together in a
lonely orchard, where they saw no creature but each other.
By degrees an apparent regard began to take place between
these two sequestered individuals. The fowl would ap-
proach the quadruped with notes of complacency, rubbing
herself gently against his legs ; while the horse would look
down with satisfaction, and move with the greatest caution
and circumspection, lest he should trample on his diminu-
tive companion. Thus, by mutual good offices, each
seemed to console the vacant hours of the other : so that
Milton, when he puts the following sentiment in the mouth
of Adam, seems to be somewhat mistaken :
" Much less can bird with beast, or fish with fowl,
So well converse ; nor with the ox the ape."
LETTER XXV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES HARRINGTON
SELBORNE, Oct. 2, 1775.
,E have two gangs or hordes of gipsies which
infest the south and west of England, and
come round in their circuit two or three
times in the year. One of these tribes calls
itself by the noble name of Stanley, of
which I have nothing particular to say ; but the other is
distinguished by an appellative somewhat remarkable. As
far as their harsh gibberish can be understood, they seem
to say that the name of their clan is Curleople : now the
216 NATURAL HISTOBY
termination of this word is apparently Grecian : and as
Mezeray and the gravest historians all agree that these
vagrants did certainly migrate from Egypt and the East,
two or three centuries ago, and so spread by degrees over
Europe, may not this family-name, a little corrupted, be the
very name they brought with them from the Levant? It
would be matter of some curiosity, could one meet with an
intelligent person among them, to inquire whether, in their
jargon, they still retain any Greek words : the Greek
radicals will appear in hand, foot, head, water, earth, &c.
It is possible that amidst their cant and corrupted dialect
many mutilated remains of their native language might
still be discovered.
With regard to those peculiar people, the gipsies, one
thing is very remarkable, and especially as they came from
warmer climates; and that is, that while other beggars
lodge in barns, stables, and cow-houses, these sturdy
savages seem to pride themselves in braving the severities
of winter, and in living sub dio the whole year round.
Last September was as wet a month as ever was known ;
and yet during those deluges did a young gipsy girl lie-in
in the midst of one of our hop gardens, on the cold
ground, with nothing over her but a piece of a blanket
extended on a few hazel rods bent hoop fashion, and stuck
into the earth at each end, in circumstances too trying for
a cow in the same condition : yet within this garden there
was a large hop-kiln, into the chambers of which she might
have retired, had she thought shelter an object worthy her
attention.
Europe itself, it seems, cannot set bounds to the rovings
of these vagabonds : for Mr. Bell, in his return from Pekin,
met a gang of these people on the confines of Tartary, who
were endeavouring to penetrate those deserts and try their
fortune in China.1
Gipsies are called in French, Bohcmicns, in Italian and
modern Greek, Zingari.
1 See Bell's Travels in China.- -G. W.
OF SELBOENE. 217
LETTER XXVI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Nov. 1, 1775.
" Hie tsedas pingues, hie plurimus ignis
Semper, et assidua postes fuligine nigri."
SHALL make no apology for troubling you
with the detail of a very simple piece of
domestic economy, being satisfied that you
think nothing beneath your attention that
tends to utility : the matter alluded to is the
use of rushes instead of candles, which I am well aware
prevails in many districts besides this ; but as I know there
are countries also where it docs not obtain, and as I have
considered the subject with some degree of exactness, I
shall proceed in my humble story, and leave you to judge
of the expediency.
The proper species of rush for this purpose seems to be
the Juncus conglomerate, or common soft rush, which is to
be found in most moist pastures, by the sides of streams,
and under hedges. These rushes are in best condition in
the height of summer ; but may be gathered so as to serve
the purpose well, quite on to autumn. It would be need-
less to add that the largest and longest are best. Decayed
labourers, women, and children, make it their business to
procure and prepare them. As soon as they are cut they
must be flung into water, and kept there ; for otherwise
they will dry and shrink, and the peel will not run. At
first a person would find it no easy matter to divest a rush
of its peel or rind, so as to leave one regular, narrow, even
rib from top to bottom that may support the pith : but this,
like other feats, soon becomes familiar even to children ;
and we have seen an old woman, stone-blind, performing
this business with great dispatch, and seldom failing to
218 NATURAL HISTORY
strip them with the nicest regularity. When these Junci
are thus far prepared, they must lie out on the grass to be
bleached, and take the dew for some nights, and afterwards
be dried in the sun.
Some address is required in dipping these rushes in the
scalding fat or grease ; but this knack also is to be
attained by practice. The careful wife of an industrious
Hampshire labourer obtains all her fat for nothing; for she
saves the scummings of her bacon pot for this use ; and if
the grease abounds with salt, she causes the salt to precipi-
tate to the bottom, by setting the scummings in a warm
oven. Where hogs are not much in use, and especially by
the seaside, the coarser animal oils will come very cheap.
A pound of common grease may be procured for four pence;
and about six pounds of grease will dip a pound of rushes ;
and one pound of rushes may be bought for one shilling :
so that a pound of rushes, medicated and ready for use,
will cost three shillings. If men that keep bees will mix
a little wax with the grease, it would give it a consistency,
and render it more cleanly, and make the rushes burn
longer : mutton suet would have the same effect.
A good rush, which measured in length two feet four
inches and a half, being minuted, burned only three
minutes short of an hour : and a rush of still greater length
has been known to burn one hour and a quarter.
These rushes give a good clear light. Watch-lights
(coated with tallow) , it is true, shed a dismal one, " dark-
ness visible ;" but then the wick of those has two ribs of
the rind, or peel, to support the pith, while the wick of the
dipped rush has but one. The two ribs are intended to
impede the progress of the flame and make the candle last.
In a pound of dry rushes, avoirdupois, which I caused
to be weighed and numbered, we found upwards of 1,600
individuals. Now, suppose each of these burns, one with
another, only half an hour, then a poor man will purchase
800 hours of light, a time exceeding thirty-three entire
days, for three shillings. According to this account each
rush, before dipping, costs one-thirty-third of a farthing,
and one- eleventh afterwards. Thus a poor family will
OF SELBORNE. 219
enjoy five hours and a half of comfortable light for a far-
thing. An experienced old housekeeper assures me that
one pound and a half of rushes completely supplies his
family the year round; since working people burn no
candle in the long days, because they rise an£ go to bed by
daylight.
Little farmers use rushes much in the short days, both
morning and evening, in the dairy and kitchen ; but the
very poor, who are always the worst economists, and there-
fore must continue very poor, buy a halfpenny candle every
evening, which, in their blowing, open rooms, does not
burn much more than two hours. Thus have they only two
hours' light for their money instead of eleven.
While on the subject of rural economy, it may not bo
improper to mention a pretty implement of housewifery
that we have seen no where else ; that is, little neat besoms
which our foresters make from the stalks of the Polytrichum
commune, or great golden maiden-hair, which they call silk-
wood, and find plenty in the bogs. When this moss is
well combed and dressed, and divested of its outer skin, it
becomes of a beautiful bright chestnut colour ; and, being
soft and pliant, is very proper for the dusting of beds,
curtains, carpets, hangings, &c. If these besoms were
known to the brush-makers in town, it is probable they
might come much in use for the purpose above mentioned.1
1 A besom of this sort is to be seen in Sir Ashton Lever's
Museum.— G. W.
This Museum, to which allusion has been already made, was disposed
of by auction in 1806. See p. 3, footnote. — ED.
220
NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XXVII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRING TON.
SELBORNE, Dec. 12, 1775.
jE had in this village, more than twenty years
ago, an idiot boy, whom I well remember,
who, from a child, showed a strong propen-
sity to bees ; they were his food, his amuse-
ment, his sole object: and as people of this
cast have seldom more than one point in view, so this lad
exerted all his few faculties on this one pursuit. In the
winter he dozed away his time, within his father's house,
by the fireside, in a kind of torpid state, seldom departing
from the chimney-corner ; but in the summer he was all
alert, and in quest of his game in the fields, and on sunny
banks. Honey bees, humble bees, and wasps, were his
prey wherever he found them : he had no apprehensions
from their stings, but would seize them nudis manibus, and
at once disarm them of their weapons, and suck their
bodies for the sake of their honey-bags. Sometimes ho
would fill his bosom between his shirt and his skin with a
number of these captives : and sometimes would confine
them in bottles. He was a very Merops apiaster, or bee-
bird; and very injurious to men that kept bees; for he
would slide into their bee-gardens, and, sitting down before
the stools, would rap with his finger on the hives, and so
take the bees as they came out. He has been known to
overturn hives for the sake of honey, of which he was
passionately fond. Where metheglin was making he would
linger round the tubs and vessels, begging a draught of
what he called bee-wine. As he ran about he used to
make a humming noise with his lips, resembling the buzzing
of bees. This lad was lean and sallow, and of a cadaverous
complexion ; and, except in his favourite pursuit, in which
he was wonderfully adroit, discovered no manner of under-
OF SELBOENE. 221
standing. Had his capacity been better, and directed to
the same object, he had perhaps abated much of our wonder
at the feats of a more modern exhibitor of bees ; and we
may justly say of him now,
" Thou,
Had thy presiding star propitious shone,
Shouldst Wildman be."
When a tall youth, he was removed from hence to a
distant village, where he died, as I understand, before he
arrived at manhood.
LETTER XXVIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON".
SELBORNE, Jan. 8, 1776.
T is the hardest thing in the world to shake
off superstitious prejudices : they are sucked
in, as it were, with our mother's milk, and,
growing up with us at a time when they
take the fastest hold, and make the most
lasting impressions, become so interwoven into our very
constitutions, that the strongest good sense is required to
disengage ourselves from them. No wonder, therefore,
that the lower people retain them their whole lives through,
since their minds are not invigorated by a liberal education,
and therefore not enabled to make any efforts adequate to
the occasion.
Such a preamble seems to be necessary before we enter
on the superstitions of this district, lest we should be sus-
pected of exaggeration in a recital of practices too gross for
this enlightened age.
But the people of Tring, in Hertfordshire, would do well
to remember that no longer ago than the year 1751, and
within twenty miles of the capital, they seized on two super-
annuated wretches, crazed with age, and overwhelmed with
222 NATURAL HISTORY
infirmities, on a suspicion of witchcraft, and, by trying
experiments, drowned them in a horse-pond.
In a farm-yard near the middle of this village stands at
this day, a row pf pollard-ashes, which, by the seams and
long cicatrices down their sides, manifestly show that in
former times they have been cleft asunder. These trees,
when young and flexible, were severed and held open by
wedges, while ruptured children, stripped naked, were
pushed through the apertures, under a persuasion that, by
such a process, the poor babes would be cured of their
infirmity. As soon as the operation was over, the tree, in
the suffering part, was plastered with loam, and carefully
swathed up. If the parts coalesced and soldered together,
as usually fell out, where the feat was performed with any
adroitness at all, the party was cured ; but where the cleft
continued to gape, the operation, it was supposed, would
prove ineffectual. Having occasion to enlarge my garden
not long since, I cut down two or three such trees, one of
which did not grow together.
We have several persons now living in the village, who,
in their childhood, were supposed to be healed by this
superstitious ceremony, derived down, perhaps, from our
Saxon ancestors, who practised it before their conversion
to Christianity.1
1 " Much nearer to the metropolis than Selborne," says Mr. Bennett,
in a note to this passage, " and in days later than those alluded to by
White, the ceremony described by him has been practised. The ash
resorted to for the charm, in the instance referred to, is in the hedge of
an orchard belonging to a house near Enfield, in which some of my
earlier years were spent. A man living in the neighbourhood, and at
the time when I was best acquainted with it (1810) about sixty years
of age, was indicated as the individual on whose behalf recourse had
been had to the observance. The tree had healed, and the cure had, of
course, been performed."
He adds : — " Is it worth the remark that, as ashes seem seldom to fail to
grow together after having been split, so also does it rarely happen that
infants affected with umbilical hernia fail to be relieved from it at a
very early age ; and that, consequently, the charm-tree would, almost
beyond the probability of an exception, accord in its healing with that
of the infant whose fate was thus supposed to have been mysteriously
connected with it ?" — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 223
At the south corner of the Plestor, or area near the
church, there stood, about twenty years ago, a very old
grotesque hollow pollard-ash, which for ages had been
looked on with no small veneration as a shrew-ash. Now a
shrew-ash is an ash whose twigs or branches, when gently
applied to the limbs of cattle, will immediately relieve the
pains which a beast suffers from the running of a shrew-
mouse over the part affected; for it is supposed that a
shrew-mouse is of so baneful and deleterious a nature that
wherever it creeps over a beast, be it horse, cow, or sheep,
the suffering animal is afflicted with cruel anguish, and
threatened with the loss of the use of the limb. Against
this accident, to which they were continually liable, our
provident forefathers always kept a shrew-ash at hand,
which, when once medicated, would maintain its virtue for
ever. A shrew-ash was made thus:1 — Into the body of the
tree a deep hole was bored with an auger, and a poor
devoted shrew-mouse was thrust in alive, and plugged in,
no doubt with several quaint incantations long since for-
gotten. As the ceremonies necessary for such a consecra-
tion are no longer understood, all succession is at an end,
and no such tree is known to subsist in the manor or
hundred.
1 For a similar practice, see Plot's Staffordshire — G W.
Dr. Plot relates that two workmen, on sawing the trunk of a solid
oak, cut through the body of " a Hardishrew or Nursrow (as they here
call them), i.e., a field-mouse" and that "the case remains an inexplic-
able riddle to all those about to this very day. But methinks, to any
one that considers the superstitious custom they have in this country of
making Nursrow-trees for the cure of unaccountable swellings in their
cattle, the thing should not seem strange. For to make any tree,
whether oak, ash, or elm, it being indifferent which, a Nursrow -tree,
they catch one or more of these mice (which they fancy bite their cattle,
and make them swell), and having bored a hole to the centre in the body
of the tree, they put the mice in, and then drive a peg in after them of
the same wood, where they, starving at last, communicate forsooth such
a virtue to the tree that the cattle thus swoln, being whipped with the
boughs of it, presently recover ; of which trees they have not so many,
thcugrh so easily made, but that at some places they go eight or ten
miles to procure this remedy.1'— ED.
224 NATURAL HISTORY
As to that on the Plestor,
" The late vicar stubb'd and burn'd it,"
when he was way-warden, regardless of the remonstrances
of the bystanders, who interceded in vain for its preserva-
tion, urging its power and efficacy, and alleging that it had
been
" Reli^ione patrum multos servata per annos."
LETTER XXIX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Feb. 7. 1776.
heavy fogs, on elevated situations, espe-
cially, trees are perfect alembics ; and no
one that has not attended to such matters
can imagine how much water one tree will
distil in a night's time, by condensing the
vapour which trickles down the twigs and boughs, so as to
make the ground below quite in a float. In Newton Lane,
in October, 1775, on a misty day, a particular oak in
leaf dropped so fast that the cartway stood in puddles,
and the ruts ran with water, though the ground in general
was dusty.
In some of our smaller islands in the West Indies, if I
mistake not, there are no springs or rivers ; but the people
are supplied with that necessary element, water, merely by
the dripping of some large tall trees, which, standing in the
bosom of a mountain, keep their heads constantly enveloped
with fogs and clouds, from which they dispense their kindly
never-ceasing moisture ; and so render those districts habit-
able by condensation alone.
Trees in leaf have such a vast proportion more of surface
than those that are naked that, in theory, their condensa-
tions should greatly exceed those that are stripped of their
leaves ; but as the former imbibe also a great quantity of
moisture, it is difficult to say which drip most : but this I
OF SELBORNE. 225
know, that deciduous trees that are entwined with much ivy
seem to distil the greatest quantity. Ivy leaves are smooth,
and thick, and cold, and, therefore, condense very fast ;
and, besides, evergreens imbibe very little. These facts
may furnish the intelligent with hints concerning what sorts
of trees they should plant round small ponds that they
would wish to be perennial, and show them how advan-
tageous some trees are in preference to others.
Trees perspire profusely, condense largely, and check
evaporation so much that woods are always moist : no
wonder therefore that they contribute much to pools and
streams.
That trees are great promoters of lakes and rivers,
appears from a well-known fact in North America; for,
since the woods and forests have been grubbed and cleared,
all bodies of watei are much diminished ; so that some
streams that were very considerable a century ago, will not
now drive a common mill.1 Besides, most woodlands,
forests, and chases, with us, abound with pools and mo-
rasses, no doubt for the reason given above.
To a thinking mind, few phenomena are more strange
than the state of little ponds on the summits of chalk-hills,
many of which are never dry in the most trying droughts
of summer. On chalk- hills I say, because in many rocky
and gravelly soils, springs usually break out pretty high on
the sides of elevated grounds and mountains ; but no person
acquainted with chalky districts will allow that they ever
saw springs in such a soil, but in valleys and bottoms,
since the waters of so pervious a stratum as chalk all lie
on one dead level, as well-diggers have assured me agnin
and again.
Now, we have many such little round ponds in this dis-
trict; and one in particular on our sheep-down, 300 feet
above my house, which, though never above three feet deep
in the middle, and not more than thirty feet in diameter,
and containing perhaps not more than two or three hundred
hogsheads of water, yet never is known to fail, though it
1 Vide Kalm's " Travels to North America." — G. W.
Q
22G NATURAL HISTORY
affords drink for three hundred or four hundred sheep, and
for at least twenty head of large cattle beside. This pond,
it is true, is overhung with two moderate beeches, that,
doubtless, at times, afford it much supply; but then we
have others as small, that, without the aid of trees, and in
spite of evaporation from sun and wind, and perpetual con-
sumption by cattle, yet constantly maintain a moderate
share of water, without overflowing in the wettest seasons,
as they would do if supplied by springs. By my journal of
May, 1775, it appears that " the small and even considerable
ponds in the vales are now dried up, while the small ponds
on the very tops of hills arc but little affected." Can this
difference be accounted for from evaporation alone, which
certainly is more prevalent in bottoms ? or rather, have
not thoso elevated pools some unnoticed recruits, which in
the night-time counterbalance the waste of the day, without
which, the cattle alone must soon exhaust them ? And
here it will be necessary to enter more minutely into the
cause. Dr. Hales, in his " Vegetable Statics/' advances,
from experiment, that "the moister the earth is, the more
dew falls on it in a night; and more than a double quantity
of dew falls on a surface of watT than there docs on an
equal surface of moist earth." Hence we see that water,
by its coolness, is enabled to assimilate to itself a large
quantity of moisture nightly, by condensation, and that the
air, when loaded with fogs and vapours, and cv7en with
copious dews, can alone advance a considerable and never-
failing resource. Persons that are much abroad, and travel
early and late, such as shepherds, fishermen, &c., can tell
what prodigious fogs prevail in the night on elevated downs,
even in the hottest parts of summer, and how much the
surfaces of things are drenched by those swimming va-
pours, though, to the senses, all the while, little moisture
seems to fall.
OF SELBORNE. 227
LETTER XXX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARTUNGTON.
SELBORNE, April 3, 1776.
OXSIEUR HERISSANT, a French anato-
mist^ seems persuaded that he has discovered
the reason why cuckoos do not hatch their
own eggs : the impediment, he supposes,
arises from the internal structure of their
parts, which incapacitates them for incubation. According
to this gentleman, the crop, or craw, of a cuckoo does not lie
before the sternum at the bottom of the neck, as in poultry
(GaUincc) , pigeons (Columbce) , &c., but immediately behind
it, on and over the bowels, so as to make a large protuber-
ance in the belly.1
Induced by this assertion, we procured a cuckoo, and
cutting open the breast-bone and exposing the intestines
to sight, found the crop lying as mentioned above. This
stomach was large and round, and stuffed hard, like a pin-
cushion, with food, which, upon nice examination, we found
to consist of various insects, such as small scarabs, spiders,
and dragon-flies; the last of which, as they were just
emerging out of the aurelia state, we have seen cuckoos
catching on the wing. Among this farrago a1 so were to be
seen maggots, and many seeds, which belonged either to
gooseberries, currants, cranberries, or some such fruit ; so
that these birds apparently subsist on insects and fruits :
nor was there the least appearance of bones, feathers, or
fur, to support the idle notion of their being birds oi prey.
The sternum in this bird seemed to us to be remarkably
short, between which and the anus lay the crop, or craw,
and immediately behind that, the bowels against the back-
bone.
It must be allowed, as this anatomist observes, that the
1 "Ilistoire de rAcaclcmie Royale," 1752.— G. W.
228 NATVRAL HISTORY
crop placed just upon the bowels must, especially when full,
be in a very uneasy situation during the business of incuba-
tion ; yet the test will be to examine whether birds that are
actually known to sit for certain are not formed in a similar
manner. This inquiry I proposed to myself to make with
a fern-owl, or goat-sucker, as soon as opportunity offered ;
because, if their formation proves the same, the reason for
incapacity in the cuckoo will be allowed to have been taken
up somewhat hastily.
Not long after a fern-owl was procured, which, from its
aabit and shape, we suspected might resemble the cuckoo
in its internal construction. Nor were our suspicions ill-
grounded; for upon the dissection, the crop, or craw, also
lay behind the sternum, immediately on the viscera, between
them and the skin of the belly. It was bulky, and stuffed
hard with large Phalcence of several sorts, and their eggs,
which, no doubt, had been forced out of those insects by the
action of swallowing.
Now, as it appears that this bird, which is so well known
to practise incubation, is formed in a similar manner with
cuckoos, Monsieur Herissant's conjecture — that cuckoos are
incapable of incubation from the disposition of their intes-
tines— seems to fall to the ground ; and we are still at a loss
for the cause of that strange and singular peculiarity in the
instance of the Cuculus canorus.1
We found the case to be the same with the ring-tail hawk2
in respect to formation ; and, as far as I can recollect, with
the swift ; and probably it is so with many more sorts of
birds that are not granivorous.
1 The cuckoo has no true crop, and the position of its proventriculus
does not differ from that of other scansorial birds ; the oesophagus de-
scends along the posterior or dorsal part of the thorax, inclining to the
left side, and, when opposite to the lower margin of the left lung, it
begins to expand into the glandular cavity or proventriculus. The giz-
zard, which is neither large nor strong, is in immediate contact with the
abdominal parietes, and not separated from them by an intervening
stratum of intestines ; but this position cannot be supposed to interfere
with the power of incubation, since it occurs also in other birds that du
incubate. — ED.
2 This is a provincial name for the female Hen harrier, Circus cyaneus
OF SELBORNE. 229
LETTER XXXI.
TO TIIE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELHORNE, April 29, 1770.
August the 4th, 1775, we surprised a large
viper, which seemed very heavy and bloated,
as it lay in the grass basking in the sun.
When we came to cut it up, we found that
the abdomen was crowded with young, fif-
teen in number;1 the shortest of which measured full seven
inches, and were about the size of full grown earthworms.
This little fry issued into the world with the true viper spirit
about them, showing great alertness as soon as disengaged
from the belly of the dam; they twisted and wriggled about,
and set themselves up, and gaped very wide when touched
with a stick, showing manifest tokens of menace and de-
fiance, though as yet they had no manner of fangs that wo
could find, even with the help of our glasses.
To a thinking mind nothing is more wonderful than that
early instinct which impresses young animals with the
notion of the situation of their natural weapons, and of
using them properly in their own defence, even before those
weapons subsist or are formed. Thus, a young cock will
spar at his adversary before his spurs are grown; and a
calf or lamb will push with its head before its horns are
sprouted. In the same manner did these young adders
attempt to bite before their fangs were in being. The dam,
however, was furnished with very formidable ones, which
we lifted up (for they fold down when not used) , and cut
them off with the point of our scissars.
1 Bearing in mind the much vexed question, whether vipers, in time
of danger, swallow their young, it may be here observed, that the ex-
pression " abdomen," as used by Gilbert White, must not be regarded
a,s synonymous with the true stomach, but only as implying that larger
cavity in which both stomach and uterus are contained. The young, of
course, were in the latter and most natural receptacle. — ED.
230 NATURAL HISTORY
Thoro was little room to suppose that this brood had ever
been in the open air before ; and that they were taken in
for refuge, at the mouth of the dam, when she perceived
that danger was approaching, because then probably we
should have found them somewhere in the neck, and not in
the abdomen.
LETTER XXXII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
ASTRATION has a strange effect; it emas-
culates both man, beast, and bird, and brings
them to a near resemblance of the other sex.
Thus, eunuchs have smooth unmuscular arms,
thighs, and legs, and broad hips, and beard-
less chins, and squeaking voices. Gelt stags and bucks
have hornless heads, like hinds and does. Thus wethers
have small horns, like ewes ; and oxen large bent horns, and
hoarse voices when they low, like cows : for bulls have short
straight horns ; and though they mutter and grumble in a
deep tremendous tone, yet they low in a shrill high key.
Capons have small combs and gills, and look pallid about
the head, like pullets ; they also walk without any parade,
and hover chickens like hens.1 Barrow-hogs have also
small tusks like sows.
Thus far it is plain that it puts a stop to the growth of
those appendages that are looked upon as its insignia. But
the ingenious Mr. Lisle, in his book on husbandry, carries
it much farther ; for he says that the loss of those insignia
alone has sometimes a strange effect : he had a boar so fierce
and amorous, that, to prevent mischief, orders were given
1 Reaumur trained capons to nurse the chickens which he hatched by
artificial heat. They clucked exactly like a hen, and proved as good
nurses as a real mother could have been. — ED.
OF SELBOENE.
231
for his tusks to be broken off. No sooner had the beast
suffered this injury than his powers forsook him, and he
neglected those females to whom before he was passionately
attached, and from whom no fences could restrain him.
LETTER XXXIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
HE natural term of a hog's life is little known,
and the reason is plain ; because it is neither
profitable nor convenient to keep that turbu-
lent animal to the full extent of its time ;
however, my neighbour, a man of substance,
who had no occasion to study every little advantage to a
nicety, kept a half-bred Bantam sow, who was as thick as
HOG.
she was long, and whose belly swept on the ground, till she
was advanced to her seventeenth year, at which period she
showed some tokens of age, by the decay of her teeth and
the decline of her fertility.
232 NATURAL HISTORY
For about ton years this prolific mother produced two
litters in the year, of about ten at a time, and once above
twenty at a litter ; but, as there were near double the num-
ber of pigs to that of teats, many died. From long expe-
rience in the world, this female was grown very sagacious
and artful ; when she found occasion to converse with a
boar, she used to open all the intervening gates, and march
by herself up to a distant farm where one was kept; and
when her purpose was served, would return by the same
means. At the age of about fifteen, her litters began to be
reduced to four or five; and such a litter she exhibited
when in her fatting pen. She proved when fat, good bacon,
juicy, and tender ; the rind, or sward, was remarkably thin.
At a moderate computation, she was allowed to have been
the fruitful parent of 300 pigs— a prodigious instance of
fecundity in so large a quadruped ! She was killed in
spring, 1775.
LETTER XXXIV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BAKRINGTON.
SELBORNE, May 9, 177G.
" admorunt ubera tigres."
;E have remarked in a former letter how much
incongruous animals, in a lonely state, may
be attached to each other from a spirit of
sociality ; in this it may not be amiss to re-
count a different motive which has been
known to create as strange a fondness.
My friend had a little helpless leveret brought to him,
which the servants fed with milk in a spoon, and about the
same time his cat kittened, and the young were dispatched
and buried. The hare was soon lost, and supposed to be
gone the way of most fondlings, — to be killed by some dog
or cat. However, in about a fortnight, as the master was
OF SELBOENE. 233
sitting in his garden in the dusk of the evening, he ob-
served his cat, with tail erect, trotting towards him, and
calling with little short inward notes of complacency, such
as they use towards their kittens, and something gamboling
after, which proved to be the leveret that the cat had sup-
ported with her milk, and continued to support with great
affection.
Thus was a graminivorous animal nurtured by a carnivor-
ous and predaceous one ! l
Why so cruel and sanguinary a beast as a cat, of the
ferocious genus of Fells, the murium leo, as Linnscus calls it,
should be affected with any tenderness towards an animal
which is its natural prey, is not so easy to determine.
This strange affection probably was occasioned by that
desidcrium, those tender maternal feelings which the loss of
her kittens had awakened in her breast; and by the com-
placency and ease she derived to herself from the procuring
her teats to be drawn, which were too much distended with
milk, till, from habit, she became as much delighted with
this foundling as if it had been her real offspring.
This incident is no bad solution of that strange circum-
stance which grave historians as well as the poets assert, of
exposed children being sometimes nurtured by female wild
beasts that probably had lost their young. For it is not
one whit more marvellous that Romulus and Remus, in their
infant state, should be nursed by a she-wolf, than that a
poor little sucking leveret should be fostered and cherished
by a blood-thirsty grimalkin.
" viridi foetam Mavortis in antro
Procubuisse lupam : geminos huic ubera circum
Ludere pendentcs pueros, et lambere matrem
Impavidos : illam tereti cervice reflexam
Mulcere alternos, et corpora fingere lingua."
1 An additional instance, in the case of a cat and squirrels, will be
found mentioned later in the " Observations on Quadrupeds." — ED.
234 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XXXV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTOX.
SELBORXE, May 20, 1777.
AN.DS that are subject to frequent inunda-
tions are always poor ; and probably the rea-
son may be because the worms are drowned.
The most insignificant insects and reptiles are
of much more consequence and have much
more influence in the economy of Nature than the incurious are
aware of; and are mighty in their effect, from their minuteness,
which renders them less an object of attention ; and from their
numbers and fecundity. Earthworms, though in appearance
a small and despicable link in the chain of Nature, yet, if lost,
would make a lamentable chasm. For, to say nothing of half
the birds, and some quadrupeds which are almost entirely
supported by them, worms seem to be great promoters of
vegetation, which would proceed but lamely without them,
by boring, perforating, and loosening the soil, and rendering
it pervious to rains and the fibres of plants ; by drawing
straws and stalks of leaves and twigs into it ; and, most of all,
by throwing up such infinite numbers of lumps of earth called
worm casts, which, being their excrement, is a fine manure
for grain and grass. Worms probably provide new soil for
hills and slopes where the rain washes the earth away ; and
they affect slopes probably to avoid being flooded. Gar-
deners and farmers express their detestation of worms ; the
former because they render their walks unsightly, and make
them much work ; and the latter because, as they think,
worms eat their green corn. But these men would find
that the earth without worms would soon become cold,
hard-bound, and void of fermentation, and consequently
sterile; and besides, in favour of worms, it should be hinted
that green corn, plants, and flowers, are not so much in-
jured by them as by many species of Coleoptera (scarabs)
OF SELBORNE. 235
and Tipulce (long-legs) , in their larva, or grub state ; and
by unnoticed myriads of small shell-less snails, called slugs,
which silently and imperceptibly make amazing havock
in the field and garden. Farmer Young, of Norton Farm,
says that this spring (1777) about four acres of his wheat
in one field was entirely destroyed by slugs, whicli swarmed
on the blades of corn, and devoured it as fast as it sprang.
These hints we think proper to throw out, in order to
set the inquisitive and discerning to work.
A good monography of worms would afford much enter-
tainment and information at the same time, and would open
a large and new field in natural history. Worms work most
in the spring; but by no means lie torpid in the dead
months — are out every mild night in the winter, as any
person may be convinced that will take the pains to examine
his grassplots with a candle ; are hermaphrodites, and very
prolific.
LETTER XXXVI.1
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGT.ON.
SELDORXE, Nov. 22, 1777.
OU cannot but remember that the 26th and
27th of last March were very hot days; so
sultry that everybody complained, and were
restless under those sensations to which they
had not been reconciled by gradual ap-
proaches.
This sudden summer-like heat was attended by many
summer coincidences ; for on those two days the thermo-
meter rose to 66° in the shade ; many species of insects
1 This letter was first printed in " Barrington's Miscellanies" (1781),
p. 225. " I shall here,*' he says, " subjoin a letter which I have re-
ceived from that ingenious and observant naturalist, the llev. Mr. White,
of Sclborne, Hampshire." — ED.
236 NATURAL HISTORY
revived and came forth ; some bees swarmed in this neigh-
bourhood ; the old tortoise near Lewes, in Sussex, awakened
and came forth oat of its dormitory ; and, what is most to
my present purpose, many house swallows appeared, and
were very alert in many places, and particularly at Cobham,
in Surrey.
But as that short warm period was succeeded, as well as
preceded, by harsh severe weather, with frequent frosts and
ice, and cutting winds, the insects withdrew, the tortoise
retired again into the ground, and the swallows were seen
no more until the 10th of April, when, the rigour of the
spring abating, a softer season began to prevail.
Again : it appears by my journals for many years past,
that house martins retire, to a bird, about the beginning of
October ; so that a person not very observant of such mat-
ters would conclude that they had taken their last farewell ;
but then it may be seen in my diaries also, that considerable
flocks have discovered themselves again in the first week of
November, and often on the fourth day of that month only
for one day ; and that not as if they were in actual migration,
but playing about at their leisure and feeding calmly, as if
no enterprise of moment at all agitated their spirits. And
this was the case in the beginning of this very month ; for,
on the 4th of November, more than twenty house martins,
which in appearance had all departed about the 7th of Oc-
tober, were seen again, for that one morning only, sporting
between my fields and the Hanger, and feasting on insects
which swarmed in that sheltered district. The preceding
day was wet and blustering, but the 4th was dark and mild,
and soft, the wind at south-west, and the thermometer at
58^°; a pitch not common at that season of the year.
Moreover, it may not be amiss to add in this place, that
whenever the thermometer is above .50°, the bat comes flit-
ting out in every autumnal and winter month.
From all these circumstances laid together, it is obvious
that torpid insects, reptiles, and quadrupeds, are awakened
from their profound est slumbers by a little untimely warmth ;
and therefore that nothing so much promotes this death-like
stupor as a defect of heat. And farther, it is reasonable to
OF SELBORNE. 237
suppose that two whole species, or at least many individuals
of those two species of British Hirundines do never leave
this island at all, but partake of the same benumbed state ;
for we cannot suppose that, after a month's absence, house
martins can return from southern regions to appear for one
morning in November, or that house swallows should leave
the districts of Africa to enjoy, in March, the transient
summer of a couple of days.1
LETTER XXXVII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRING TON.
SELBORNE, Jan. 8, 1778.
HERE was in this village, several years ago, a
miserable pauper, who, from his birth, was
afflicted with a leprosy, as far as we are aware,
of a singular kind, since it affected only the
palms of his hands and the soles of his feet.
This scaly eruption usually broke out twice in the year, at
the spring and fall ; and, by peeling away, left the skin so
thin and tender, that neither his hands nor feet were able
to perform their functions ; so that the poor object was half
his time on crutches, incapable of employ, and languishing
in a tiresome state of indolence and inactivity. His habit
was lean, lank, and cadaverous. In this sad plight he
dragged on a miserable existence, a burthen to himself and
his parish, which was obliged to support him till he was
relieved by death, at more than thirty years of age.
The good women, who love to accouut for every defect
in children by the doctrine of longing, said that his mother
felt a violent propensity for oysters, which she was unable
to gratify ; and that the black rough scurf on his hands and
1 A more obvious explanation of the appearance of swallows in No-
vember is that they are late broods from the north ; and those seen in
March are early arrivals on their way northwards. — ED.
238 NATURAL EISTOEY
feet were the shells of that fish. We knew his parents,
neither of which were lepers ; his father, in particular, lived
to be far advanced in years.
In all ages the leprosy has made dreadful havoc among
mankind. The Israelites seem to have been greatly afflicted
with it from the most remote times ; as appears from the
peculiar and repeated injunctions given them in the Levi-
tical law.1 Nor was the rancour of this foul disorder much
abated in the last period of their commonwealth, as may be
seen in many passages of the New Testament.
Some centuries ago, this horrible distemper prevailed all
Europe over; and our forefathers were by no means exempt,
as appears by the large provision made for objects labouring
under this calamity. There was an hospital for female
lepers in the diocese of Lincoln, a noble one near Durham,
three in London and Southwark, and perhaps many more
in or near our great towns and cities. Moreover, some
crowned heads, and other wealthy and charitable personages,
bequeathed large legacies to such poor people as languished
under this hopeless infirmity.
It must, therefore, in these days be, to a humane, and
thinking person, a matter of equal wonder and satisfaction,
when he contemplates how nearly this pest is eradicated,
and observes that a leper now is a rare sight. He will,
moreover, when engaged in such a train of thought, natu-
rally inquire for the reason. This happy change perhaps
may have originated and been continued from the much
smaller quantity of salted meat and fish now eaten in these
kingdoms; from the use of linen next the skin ; from the
plenty of better bread ; and from the profusion of fruits,
roots, legumes, and greens, so common in every family.
Three or four centuries ago, before there were any enclo-
sures, sown-grasses, field-turnips, or field-carrots, or hay, all
the cattle which had grown fat in summer, and were not
killed for winter use, were turned out soon after Michaelmas
to shift as they could through the dead months; so that no
fresh meat could be had in winter or spring. Hence the
1 Sec Leviticus, cliap. xiii. and xiv.
OF SELBORNE. 239
marvellous account of the vast stores of salted flesh found in
the larder of the eldest Spencer 1 in the days of Edward the
Second, even so late in the spring as the 3rd of May. It
was from magazines like these that the turbulent barons
supported in idleness their riotous swarms of retainers,
ready for any disorder or mischief. But agriculture is now
arrived at such a pitch of perfection, that our best and fat-
test meats are killed in the winter ; and no man needs eat
salted flesh, unless he prefers it, that has money to buy
fresh.
One cause of this distemper might be, no doubt, the
quantity of wretched fresh and salt fish consumed by the
commonalty at all seasons as well as in Lent, which our
poor now would hardly be persuaded to touch.
The use of linen changes, shirts or shifts, in the room of
sordid and filthy woollen, long worn next the skin, is a
matter of neatness comparatively modern ; but must prove
a great means of preventing cutaneous ails. At this very
time, woollen instead of linen prevails among the poorer
Welsh, who are subject to foul eruptions.
The plenty of good wheaten bread that now is found
among all ranks of people in the south, instead of that
miserable sort which used in old days to be made of barley
or beans, may contribute not a little to the sweetening
their blood and correcting their juices; for ,thc inhabitants
of mountainous districts to this day are still liable to the
itch and other cutaneous disorders, from a wretchedness and
poverty of diet.
As to the produce of a garden, every middle-aged per-
son of observation may perceive, within his own memory,
both in town and country, how vastly the consumption of
vegetables is increased. Green-stalls in cities now support
multitudes in a comfortable state, while gardeners get for-
tunes. Every decent labourer also has his garden, which
is half his support, as well as his delight; and common
farmers provide plenty of beans, peas, and greens, for their
hinds to eat with their bacon; and those few that do not are
1 Viz. 600 bacons, eighty carcases of beef, and GOO muttons. — Cr. W.
240 NATURAL HIS20RY
despised for their sordid parsimony, and looked upon ag
regardless of the welfare of their dependents. Potatoes
have prevailed in this little district, by means of premiums,
within these twenty years only ; and are much esteemed
here now by the poor, who would scarce have ventured to
taste them in the last reign.
Our Saxon ancestors certainly had some sort of cabbage,
because they call the month of February sproutcale;1 but
long after their days, the cultivation of gardens was little
attended to. The religious, being men of leisure, and keep-
ing up a constant correspondence with Italy, were the first
people among us that had gardens and fruit-trees in any
perfection within the walls of their abbeys and priories.2
The barons neglected every pursuit that did not lead to war
or tend to the pleasure of the chase.
It was not till gentlemen took up the study of horticul-
ture themselves that the knowledge of gardening made such
hasty advances. Lord Cobham, Lord Ila, and Mr. Waller
of Beaconsfield, were some of the first people of rank that
promoted the elegant science of ornamenting, without de-
spising, the superintendence of the kitchen quarters and
fruit walls.
A remark made by the excellent Mr. Ray, in his Tour of
Europe, at once surprises us, and corroborates what has
been advanced above ; for we find him observing, so late as
his days, that "the Italians use several herbs for sallets,
which are not yet or have not been but lately used in Eng-
land, viz. selleri (celery), which is nothing else but the
sweet smallage ; the young shoots whereof, with a little of
the head of the root cut off, they eat raw with oil and
1 The Saxon names of many other months were equally significant ;
e.g. March, stormy month; May, Thrimilchi, the cows then being
milked three times a day ; June, dig and weed month ; September, bar-
ley month, &c. — ED.
2 " In monasteries, the lamp of knowledge continued to burn, however
dimly. In them, men of business were formed for the state : the art
of writing was cultivated by the monks ; they were the only proficients
in mechanics, gardening, and architecture." See Dalrymple's " Annals
of Scotland."— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 241
pepper." And farther, lie adds, " curled endive blanched is
much used beyond seas ; and, for a raw sallet, seemed to
excel lettuce itself." Now, this journey was undertaken no
longer ago than in the year 1663.
LETTER XXXVIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
" Forte puer, comitum seductus ab agmine fido,
Dixerat, ecquis adest ? et, adest, responderat echo.
Hie stupet ; utque aciem partes divisit in omnes,
Voce, veni, clamat magna. Vocat ilia vocantem."
SELBORNE, Feb. 12, 1778.
a district so diversified as this, so full of
hollow vales and hanging woods, it is no
wonder that echoes should abound. Many
we have discovered that return the cry of a
pack of dogs, the notes of a hunting horn, a
tunable ring of bells, or the melody of birds, very agreeably j
but we were still at a loss for a polysyllabical, articulate
echo, till a young gentleman, who had parted from his com-
pany in a summer evening walk, and was calling after them,
stumbled upon a very curious one in a spot where it might
least be expected. At first he was much surprised, and
could not be persuaded but that he was mocked by some
boy ; but, repeating his trials in several languages, and find-
ing his respondent to be a very adroit polyglot, he then
discerned the deception.
This echo, in an evening, before rural noises cease, would
repeat ten syllables most articulately and distinctly, espe-
cially if quick dactyls were chosen. The last syllables of
<{ Tityre, tu patulae recubans "
were as audibly and intelligibly returned as the first ; and
there is no doubt, could trial have been made, but that at
R
242 NATURAL HISTORY
midnight, when the air is very elastic, and a dead stillness
prevails, one or two syllables more might have been ob-
tained; but the distance rendered so late an experiment
very inconvenient.
Quick dactyls we observed succeeded best ; for when we
came to try its powers in slow, heavy, embarrassed spondees
of the same number of syllables,
"Monstrum horrendum, informe, ingens "
we could perceive a return but of four or five.
All echoes have some one place to which they are returned
stronger and more distinct than to any other ; and that is
always the place that lies at right angles with the object of
repercussion, and is not too near, nor too far off. Build-
ings or naked rocks re-echo much more articulately than
hanging woods or vales ; because in the latter the voice is,
as it were, entangled and embarrassed in the covert, and
weakened in the rebound.
The true object of this echo, as we found by various ex-
periments, is the stone-built, tiled hop-kiln in Gaily Lane,
which measures in front forty feet, and from the ground to
the eaves twelve feet. The true centrum plionicum, or just
distance, is one particular spot in the King's Field, in the
path to Nore Hill, on the very brink of the steep balk above
the hollow cart- way. In this case there is no choice of dis-
tance ; but the path, by mere contingency, happens to be
the lucky, the identical spot, because the ground rises or
falls so immediately, if the speaker either retires or advances,
that his mouth would at once be above or below the object.
We measured this polysyllabical echo with great exact-
ness, and found the distance to fall very short of Dr. Plot's
rule for distinct articulation ; for the Doctor, in his " History
of Oxfordshire," allows 120 feet for the return of each syl-
lable distinctly ; hence this echo, which gives ten distinct
syllables, ought to measure 400 yards, or 120 feet to each
syllable ; whereas our distance is only 258 yards, or near
seventy-five feet to each syllable. Thus our measure falls
short of the Doctor's, as five to eight ; but then it must be
acknowledged that this candid philosopher was convinced
OF SELSORNE. 243
afterwards that some latitude must be admitted of in the
distance of echoes according to time and place.1
When experiments of this sort are making, it should
always be remembered that weather and the time of day
have a vast influence on an echo ; for a dull, heavy, moist
air deadens and clogs the sound ; and hot sunshine renders
the air thin and weak, and deprives it of all its springiness ;
and a ruffling wind quite defeats the whole. In a still,
clear, dewy evening, the air is most elastic ; and perhaps
the later the hour the more so.
Echo has always been so amusing to the imagination,
that the poets have personified her ; and in their hands she
has been the occasion of many a beautiful fiction. Nor
need the gravest man be ashamed to appear taken with such
a phenomenon, since it may become the subject of philoso-
phical or mathematical inquiries.
One should have imagined that echoes, if not entertain-
ing, must at least have been harmless and inoffensive ; yet
Virgil advances a strange notion, that they are injurious to
bees. After enumerating some probable and reasonable
annoyances, such as prudent owners would wish, far re-
moved from their bee-gardens, he adds,
*' aut ubi concava pulsa
Saxa sonant, vocisque offensa resultat imago."
This wild and fanciful assertion will hardly be admitted
by the philosophers of these days ; especially as they all
now seem agreed that insects are not furnished with any
organs of hearing at all.2 But, if it should be urged, that
1 It is evident too, as. Mr. B&nnett hag observed, from the previous
statement of the different number of syllables returned by the echo,
according to whether they were quick dactyls or heavy spondees, that
some allowance must be made on this account also. — ED.
2 This was the opinion of Linnaeus and Bonnet, naturalists of the
highest authority. But, as Mr. Bennett has remarked, " repeated ob-
servations and experiments have since shown that many insects possesa
the sense of hearing. Without the aid of experiment it might, indeed,
almost be regarded as established, that in those cases in which the
faculty of producing sound is possessed by one sex of an animal, that of
hearing it should belong to the other sex ; and it would seem rather
244 NATURAL HISTORY
though they cannot hear, yet perhaps they may feel the re-
percussion of sounds, I grant it is possible they may. Yet
that these impressions are distasteful or hurtful, I deny;
because bees, in good summers, thrive well in my outlet,
where the echoes are very strong : for this village is an-
other Anathoth, a place of responses or echoes. Besides,
it does not appear from experiment that bees are in any
way capable of being affected by sounds : 1 for I have often
tried my own with a large speaking-trumpet held close to
their hives, and with such an exertion of voice as would
have hailed a ship at the distance of a mile, and still these
insects pursued their various employments undisturbed,
and without showing the least sensibility or resentment.
preposterous to grant tlie existence of a sense in one sex of an insect,
and deny it to the other. Gilbert White, in his Letter respecting the
field cricket (XLVL), although in the earlier part of it he seems to
guard himself from admitting that these insects hear by assuming that
they feel ; a person's footsteps as he advances,' must be regarded as
insinuating the possession of that sense when he subsequently remarks
that ' the males only make that shrilling noise, perhaps out of rivalry
and emulation ' — a rivalry and emulation which could not be excited in
others by a sound unheard by them.
" But reasoning and conjecture are both equally unnecessary in a
case in which direct observation may be adduced in proof. Brunelli's
experiments seem on this point altogether satisfactory, and to prove
that both the males and the females possess the sense of hearing. He
kept several males of the large green grasshopper in a closet, where they
were very merry and continued singing all the day ; but a tap at the
door would immediately silence them. In this instance they might,
perhaps, have been affected by the concussion of the air ; and the result
might rather have been owing to acuteness of touch than to hearing.
But his subsequent experiments were not open to such an objection.
Pie learned to imitate the chirping of these grasshoppers : and when he
did this at the door of the closet in which they were kept, they soon
began to answer him; at first by the gentle chirpings of a few, and
then by a full chorus of the whole of them. He afterwards enclosed a
male grasshopper in a box, and placed it in one part of his garden,
leaving a female at liberty in a distant part of it : as soon as the male
began to sing, the female immediately hopped away towards him. This
latter experiment was frequently repeated, and in every case the female,
as soon as the male began to chirp, hastened to join him."
1 ThL statement has recently received some confirmation from the
experiments of Sir John Lubbock, " Journ. Linn. Soc." 1874. — ED.
OF SELBORNE: 245
Some time since its discovery, this echo is become totally
silent, though the object or hop-kiln remains: nor is there
any mystery in this defect ; for the field between is planted
as a hop-garden, and the voice of the speaker is totally ab-
sorbed and lost among the poles and entangled foliage of
the hops. And when the poles are removed in autumn,
the disappointment is the same, because a tall quickset
hedge, nurtured up for the purpose of shelter to the hop-
ground, entirely interrupts the impulse and repercussion of
the voice : so that, till those obstructions are removed, no
more of its garrulity can be expected.
Should any gentleman of fortune think an echo in his
park, or outlet, a pleasing incident, he might build one at
little or no expense. For whenever he had occasion for a
new barn, stable, dog-kennel, or the like structure, it would
be only needful to erect this building on the gentle declivity
of a hill, with a like rising opposite to it, at a few hundred
yards' distance; and perhaps success might be the easier
ensured, could some canal, lake, or stream intervene. From
a seat at the centrum plwnicum, he and his friends might
amuse themselves sometimes of an evening with the prattle
of this loquacious nymph ; of whose complacency and decent
reserve more may be said than can with truth of every in-
dividual of her sex ; since she is
" qua nee reticere loquenti,
Nee prior ipsa loqui didicit resonabilis echo.*1
P. S. — The classic reader will, I trust, pardon the follow-
ing lovely quotation, so finely describing echoes, and so
poetically accounting for their causes from popular super-
stition :
" Quae bene quom videas, rationem reddere possis
Tute tibi atque aliis, quo pacto per loca sola
Saxa pareis formas verborum ex ordine reddant,
Palanteis comites quom monteis inter opacos
Quserimus, et magna disperses voce ciemus.
Sex etiam, aut septem loca vidi reddere voces
Unam quom jaceres : ita colles collibus ipsis
Verba repulsantes iterabant dicta referre.
Haec loca eapripedes Satyros, Nymphasque tenere
Finitimi fingunt, et Faunos esse loquuntur ;
Quorum noetivago strepitu, ludoque jocanti
246 NATURAL HISTORY
Aclfirmant volgo taciturna silentia rumpi,
Chordarumque sonos fieri, dulceisque querelas,
Tibia quas fundit digitis pulsata canentum :
Et genus agricolum late sentiscere, quom Pan
Pinea semiferi capitis velamina quassans,
Unco saepe labro calamos percurrit hianteis,
Fistula silvestrem ne cesset fundere musatn."
LUCBETIUS, lib. iv. 1. 576.
LETTER XXXIX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBOBNE, May 13, 1778.
ONG tlie many singularities attending those
amusing birds, the swifts, I am now confirmed
in the opinion that we have every year the
same number of pairs invariably; at least,
the result of my inquiry has been exactly the
same for a long time past.1 The swallows and martins are
so numerous, and so widely distributed over the village,
that it is hardly possible to recount them ; while the swifts,
though they do not all build in the church, yet so frequently
haunt it, and play and rendezvous round it, that they are
easily enumerated. The number that I constantly find are
eight pairs ; about half of which reside in the church, and
the rest build in some of the lowest and meanest thatched
cottages. Now, as these eight pairs, allowance being made
for accidents, breed yearly eight pairs more, what becomes
annually of this increase ; and, what determines every
spring which pairs shall visit us, and reoccupy their ancient
haunts ?
1 It has been proved by experiment that swallows and swifts return
to haunts where in previous years they have successfully reared their
young. The birds have been caught upon their nests, and after being
marked by having particular claws cut, or by having a little bit of
ribbon or silver wire fastened round the foot, have been again liberated.
The following year the marked birds have been recaptured in the same
locality. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 247
Ever since I have attended to the subject of ornithology,
I have always supposed that that sudden reverse of affection,
that strange avrurTopyy which immediately succeeds in the
feathered kind to the most passionate fondness, is the occa-
sion of an equal dispersion of birds over the face of the
earth. Without this provision, one favourite district would
be crowded with inhabitants, while others would be desti-
tute and forsaken. But the parent birds seem to maintain
a jealous superiority, and to oblige the young to seek for
new abodes; and the rivalry of the males in many kinds
prevents their crowding the one on the other.
Whether the swallows and house martins return in the
same exact number annually is not easy to say, for rea-
sons given above ; but it is apparent, as I have remarked
before in my Monographies, that the numbers returning
bear no manner of proportion to the numbers retiring.
LETTER XL.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAlNES BARRINGTOX.
SELBORNE, June 2, 1778.
standing objection to botany has always
been, that it is a pursuit that amuses the
fancy and exercises the memory, without im-
proving the mind, or advancing any real
knowledge ; and, where the science is carried
no farther than a mere systematic classification, the charge
is but too true. But the botanist that is desirous of wiping
off this aspersion, should be by no means content with a list
of npmes; he should study plants philosophically, should
investigate the laws of vegetation, should examine the
powers and virtues of efficacious herbs, should promote their
cultivation ; and graft the gardener, the planter, and the
husbandman on the phytologist. Not that system is by
any means to be thrown aside — without system the field of
248 NATURAL HISTORY
Nature would be a pathless wilderness ; but system should
be subservient to, not the main object of, pursuit.
Vegetation is highly worthy of our attention; and in
itself is of the utmost consequence to mankind, and produc-
tive of many of the greatest comforts and elegancies of life.
To plants we owe timber, bread, beer, honey, wine, oil,
linen, cotton, &c., what not only strengthens our hearts and
exhilarates our spirits, but what secures us from inclemencies
of weather, and adorns our persons. Man, in his true state
of nature, seems to be subsisted by spontaneous vegetation ;
in middle climes, where grasses prevail, he mixes some
animal food with the produce of the field and garden ; and
it is towards the polar extremes only that, like his kindred
bears and wolves, he gorges himself with flesh alone, and is
driven, to what hunger has never been known to compel the
very beasts, to prey on his own species.1
The productions of vegetation have had a vast influence
on the commerce of nations, and have been the great pro-
moters of navigation, as may be seen in the articles of
sugar, tea, tobacco, opium, ginseng, betel, paper, &c. As
every climate has its peculiar produce, our natural wants
bring on a mutual intercourse ; so that by means of trade
each distant part is supplied with the growth of every lati-
tude. But without the knowledge of plants and their cul-
ture, we must have been content with our hips and haws,
without enjoying the delicate fruits of India, and the salu-
tiferous drugs of Peru.
Instead of examining the minute distinctions of every
various species of each obscure genus, the botanist should
endeavour to make himself acquainted with those that are
useful. You shall see a man readily ascertain every herb of
the field, yet hardly know wheat from barley, or at least one
sort of wheat or barley from another.
But of all sorts of vegetation the grasses seem to be most
neglected ; neither the farmer nor the grazier seem to dis-
tinguish the annual from the perennial, the hardy from the ten-
der, nor the succulent and nutritive from the dry and juiceless.
1 See the late voyages to the South Seas. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 249
The study of grasses would be of great consequence to a
northerly and grazing kingdom. The botanist that could im-
prove the sward of the district where he lived, would be a
useful member of society — to raise a thick turf on a naked
soil would be worth volumes of systematic knowledge ; and
he would be the best commonwealth's man that could occa-
sion the growth of " two blades of grass where one alone
was seen before."
LETTER XLI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BABRINGTON.
SELBORNE, July 3, 1778.
a district so diversified with such a variety
of hill and dale, aspects and soils, it is no
wonder that great choice of plants should be
found. Chalks, clays, sands, sheep-walks
and downs, bogs, heaths, woodlands, and
champaign fields, cannot but furnish an ample Flora. The
deep rocky lanes abound with Filices,1 and the pastures and
moist woods with Fungi. If in any branch of botany we
may seem to be wanting, it must be in the large aquatic
plants, which are not to be expected on a spot far removed
from rivers, and lying up amidst the hill country at the
spring heads. To enumerate all the plants that have been
discovered within our limits would be a needless work ; but
a short list of the more rare, and the spots where they are
to be found, may be neither unacceptable nor unentertain-
ing : —
Helleborus fcetidus, stinking hellebore, bear's foot, or set-
ter wort, — all over the High Wood and Coney Croft Hanger;
this continues a great branching plant the winter through,
blossoming about January, and is very ornamental in shady
1 The ferns, though abundant in this district, belong comparatively
to few species. — ED.
250 NATURAL HISTORY
walks and shrubberies. The good women give the leaves
powdered to children troubled with worms ; but it is a
violent remedy, and ought to be administered with caution.
Helleborus viridis, green hellebore,— in the deep stony
lane on the left hand just before the turning to Norton
Farm, and at the top of Middle Dorton under the hedge :
this plant dies down to the ground early in autumn, and
springs again about February, flowering almost as soon as it
appears above ground.
Vaccinium oxycoccos, creeping bilberries, or cranberries,
• — in the bogs of Bin's Pond ;
Vaccinium myrtillus, whortle, or bleaberries, — on the dry
hillocks of Wolmer Forest ;
Drosera rotundifoUa, round-leaved sundew, — in the bogs
of Bin's Pond ;
Drosera longifolia, long-leaved sundew, — in the bogs of
Bin's Pond ;
Comarum palustre, purple comarurn, or marsh cinquefoil,
— in the bogs of Bin's Pond ;
Hypericum androscemum, Tutsan St. John's Wort, — in
the stony, hollow lanes ;
Vinca minor , lesser periwinkle, — in Selborne Hanger and
Shrub Wood;
Monotropa hypopithys, yellow monotropa, or bird's nest,
— in Selborne Hanger under the shady beeches, to whose
roots it seems to be parasitical — at the north-west end of
the Hanger ;
Chlora perfoliata, Blackstonia perfoliata, Hudsoni, per-
foliated yellow wort, — on the banks in the King's Field ;
Paris quadrifolia, herb Paris, true love, or one berry, —
in the Church Litten Coppice ;
Chrysosplenium oppositifolium, opposite golden saxifrage,
— in the dark and rocky hollow lanes ;
Gentiana amarella, autumnal gentian, or fellwort, — on
the Zigzag and Hanger ;
Lathrcea squamaria, toothwort, — in the Church Litten
Coppice under some hazels near the foot bridge in Trim-
ming's garden hedge, and on the dry wall opposite Grange
Yard;
OF SELBORNE. 251
Dipsacus pilosus, small teasel, — in the Short and Long
Lith;
Lathy rus sylvestris, narrow-leaved, or wild lathyrus, —
in the bushes at the foot of the Short Lith, near the path ;
Ophrys spiralis,1 ladies' traces, — in the Long Lith, and
towards the south corner of the common ;
Ophrys nidus avis* bird's nest ophrys, — in the Long
Lith under the shady beeches among the dead leaves, in
Great Dorton among the bushes, and on the Hanger plenti-
fully;
Serapias latifolia? helleborine, — in the High Wood under
the shady beeches ;
Daphne laureola, spurge laurel, — in Selborne Hanger
and the High Wood ;
Daphne mezereum, the mezereon, — in Selborne Hanger
among the shrubs at the south-east end above the cottages ;
Lycoperdon tuber,* truffles, — in the Hanger and High
Wood ;
Sambucus elulus, dwarf elder, wallwort, or danewort,
— among the rubbish and ruined foundations of the Priory.5
1 Spiranthes autumnalis, Rich. 2 Neottia nidus-avis, Rich.
3 Epipactis latifolia, All. 4 Tuber cestivum, Vitt.
5 From this letter and the previous one it would appear that Gilbert
White paid comparatively but slight attention to the vegetable produc-
tions of the neighbourhood in which he resided. His strictures on
" mere systematic classification" were perhaps not uncalled-for at the
period when they were written, for the science of botany was then in a
very unsatisfactory state in this country, little else b*ung attempted
beyond an arrangement of our indigenous plants according to the sexual
system of Linnasus. It is to be regretted, however, that our author
thought it " needless work " to enumerate the plants found about
Selborne, for the possession of such a catalogue at the present day
would be of considerable interest and utility to those who are occupied
with an investigation of the laws affecting plant distribution.
In regard to the botany of Selborne, Dr. Trimen informs us that
Gilbert White's scanty observations on the subject have been supple-
mented by the late Dr. Bell Salter, who published in the " Phy tologist "
(vol. i. p. 1132) a list of the flowering plants observed by him at
Selborne during three days' botanizing in the month of September, 1844,
and subsequently in the same periodical (vol. ii. pp. 97 and 131) he
gave an elaborate account of the Brambles (Rubi). Many notices of
252 NATURAL HISTORY
Of all the propensities of plants none seem more strange
than their different periods of blossoming. Some produce
their flowers in the winter, or very first dawnings of spring ;
many when the spring is established ; some at midsummer ;
and some not till autumn. When we see the Hellelorus
foetidus and Helleborus niger blowing at Christmas, the
Helleborus hyemalis1 in January, and the Helleborus viridis
as soon as ever it emerges out of the ground, we do not
wonder, because they are kindred plants that we expect
should keep pace the one with the other. But other con-
generous vegetables differ so widely in their time of flower-
ing, that we cannot but admire. I shall only instance at
present in the Crocus sativus, the vernal, and the autumnal
crocus, which have such an affinity, that the best botanists
only make them varieties of the same genus, of which there
is only one species ; not being able to discern any differ-
ence in the corolla,, or in the internal structure. Yet the
vernal crocus expands its flowers by the beginning of
March at farthest, and often in very rigorous weather ; and
cannot be retarded but by some violence offered : — while
the autumnal (the Saffron) defies the influence of the spring
and summer, and will not blow till most plants begin to
fade and run to seed. This circumstance is one of the
wonders of the creation, little noticed, because a common
occurrence ; yet ought not to be overlooked on account
of its being familiar, since it would be as difficult to
Selborne as a locality will be found scattered throughout Dr. Brom-
field's Catalogue of Hampshire Plants (op. cit. vols. iii. iv.)
Dr. Trim en adds : " The singular parasitic Tooth wort, Laihr&a
squamaria, and the pretty Marsh Cinquefoil, Comarum palustre, do not
seem to have been recorded since Gilbert White's day for this part of
Hampshire. The Mezereon above noticed may have been planted in
the Hanger (see ' Phytologist,' vol. iii. p. 794). As an indication of
the advance which has been made in the knowledge of plants since
White's observations were penned, it may be mentioned that upon the
lowest computation the species of Crocus now known to botanists amount
to forty-seven. The three mentioned by White, Crocus sativus, C.
vcrnus, and C. nudiflorus, are now universally considered to be distinct
and well-defined species." — ED.
1 Eranthis hyemalis of recent authors.
OF. SELBOENE. 253
be explained as the most stupendous phenomenon in
nature.
" Say, what impels, amidst surrounding snow
Congeal'd, the crocus' flamy bud to glow ?
Say, what retards, amidst the summer's blaze,
TV autumnal bulb, till pale, declining days ?
The GOD of SEASONS ; whose pervading power
Controls the sun, or sheds the fleecy shower :
He bids each flower his quickening word obey ;
Or to each lingering bloom enjoins delay."
LETTER XLIL
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES HARRINGTON.
" Omnibus animalibus reliquis certus et uniusmodi et in suo cuique
genere incessus est : aves solas vario meatu feruntur et in terra et in
aere." — PLIN. Nat. Hist. lib. x. cap. 38.
SELBORNE, Aug. 7, 1778.
GOOD ornithologist should be able to dis-
tinguish birds by their air as well as by their
colours and shape ; on the ground as well as
on the wing, and in the bush as well as in
the hand. For, though it must not be said
that every species of birds has a manner peculiar to itself,
yet there is somewhat in most genera at least, that at first
sight discriminates them, and enables a judicious observer
to pronounce upon them with some certainty. Put a bird
in motion
" et vera incessu patuit .**
Thus kites and buzzards sail round in circles with wings
expanded and motionless ; and it is from their gliding
manner that the former are still called in the north of
England gleads, from the Saxon verb glidan, to glide.
The kestril, or wind-hover, has a peculiar mode of hanging
In the air in one place, his wings all the while being briskly
agitated. Hen harriers fly low over heaths or fields of
corn, and beat the ground regularly like a pointer or setting-
251 NATURAL HISTORY
dog. Owls move in a buoyant manner, as if lighter than
the air ; they seem to want ballast. There is a peculiarity
belonging to ravens that must draw the attention even of
the most incurious — they spend all their leisure time in
striking and cuffing each other on the wing in a kind of
playful skirmish ; and when they move from one place to
another, frequently turn on their backs with a loud croak,
and seem to be falling to the ground. When this odd
gesture betides them, they are scratching themselves with
one foot, and thus lose the centre of gravity. Rooks
sometimes dive and tumble in a frolicsome manner ; crows
and daws swagger in their walk ; woodpeckers fly volatu
undosOj opening and closing their wings at every stroke,
and so are always rising or falling in curves. All of this
genus use their tails, which incline downward, as a support
while they run up trees. Parrots, like all other hooked-
clawed birds, walk awkwardly, and make use of their bill
as a third foot, climbing and descending with ridiculous
caution. All the Gallince parade and walk gracefully, and
run nimbly; but fly with difficulty, with an impetuous
whirring, and in a straight line. Magpies and jays flutter
with powerless wings, and make no dispatch ; herons seem
encumbered with too much sail for their light bodies ; but
these vast hollow wings are necessary in carrying burthens,
such as large fishes, and the like ; pigeons, and particularly
the sort called smiters, have a way of clashing their wings
the one against the other over their backs with a loud snap ;
another variety called tumblers turn themselves over in the
air. Some birds have movements peculiar to the season of
pairing : thus ring-doves, though strong and rapid at other
times, yet in the spring hang about on the wing in a toying
and playful manner ; thus the cock-snipe, while breeding,
forgetting his former flight, fans the air like the wind- hover ;
and the greenfinch in particular exhibits such languishing
and faltering gestures as to appear like a wounded and
dying bird ; the kingfisher darts along like an arrow ; fern-
owls, or goat-suckers, glance in the dusk over the tops of
trees like a meteor ; starlings, as it were, swim along, while
missel-thrushes use a wild and desultory flight; swallows
OF SELBORNE. 255
sweep over the surface of the ground and water, and
distinguish themselves by rapid turns and quick evolutions ;
swifts dash round in circles, and the bank martin moves
with frequent vacillations like a butterfly. Most of the
small birds fly by jerks, rising and falling as they advance.
Most small birds hop, but wagtails and larks walk, moving
their legs alternately. Skylarks rise and fall perpendicularly
as they sing ; woodlarks hang poised in the air ; and
titlarks rise and fall in large curves, singing in their
descent. The whitethroat uses odd jerks and gesticula-
tions over the tops of hedges and bushes. All the duck
kind waddle ; divers and auks walk as if fettered, and stand
erect on their tails : these are the compedes of Linnaeus.1
Geese and cranes, and most wild fowls, move in figured
flights, often changing their position. The secondary
remiges of Tringce, wild ducks, and some others, are very
long, and give their wings, when in motion, a hooked ap-
pearance.2 Dabchicks, moorhens, and coots, fly erect, with
their legs hanging down, and hardly make any dispatch ;
the reason is plain, their wings are placed too forward out
of the true centre of gravity, as the legs of auks and divers
are situated too backward.
LETTER XLIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBOBNE, Sept. 9, 1778.
the motion of birds, the transition is
natural enough to their notes and language,
of which I shall say something. Not that I
would pretend to understand their language
like the vizier, who, by the recital of a con-
1 " Pedes compedes," Genus Colymbns, " Syst. Nat." i. p. 220.— ED.
2 These are not the secondaries, however, but the tertials. The
secondaries are always short. — En.
256 NATURAL HISTORY
versation which passed between two owls, reclaimed a sultan,
before delighting in conquest and devastation ;* but I would
be thought only to mean that many of the winged tribes
have various sounds and voices adapted to express their
various passions, wants, and feelings ; such as anger, fear,
love, hatred, hunger, and the like. All species are not
equally eloquent ; some are copious and fluent, as it were,
in their utterance, while others are confined to a few im-
portant sounds : no bird, like the fish kind, is quite mute,
though some are rather silent. The language of birds is
very ancient, and, like other ancient modes of speech, very
elliptical; little is said, but much is meant and understood.
The notes of the eagle kind are shrill and piercing ; and
about the season of nidification much diversified, as I have
been often assured by a curious observer of Nature who long
resided at Gibraltar, where eagles abound. The notes of
our hawks much resemble those of the king of birds. Owls
have very expressive notes ; they hoot in a fine vocal sound,
much resembling the vox humana, and reducible by a pitch-
pipe to a musical key.2 This note seems to express com-
placency and rivalry among the males : they use also a quick
call and a horrible scream ; and can snore and hiss when
they mean to menace. Ravens, beside their loud croak, can
exert a deep and solemn note that makes the woods to echo;
the amorous sound of a crow is strange and ridiculous ; rooks,
in the breeding season, attempt sometimes, in the gaiety of
their hearts, to sing, but with no great success ; the parrot
kind have many modulations of voice, as appears by their
aptitude to learn human sounds ; doves coo in an amorous
and mournful manner, and are emblems of despairing lovers ;
the woodpecker sets up a sort of loud and hearty laugh ; the
fern-owl or goat-sucker, from the dusk till daybreak, sere-
nades his mate with the clattering of castanets. All the
tuneful Passer es express their complacency by sweet modu-
lations, and a variety of melody. The swallow, as has been
1 See "Spectator," vol. vii. No. 512.— G. W.
a The brown owl hoots ; tlie white owl screams. — G. W.
But see p. 177, note 2. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 257
observed in a former letter, by a shrill alarm, bespeaks the
attention of the other Hirundincs, and bids them be aware
that the hawk is at hand. Aquatic and gregarious birds,
especially the nocturnal, that shift their quarters in the dark,
are very noisy and loquacious, as cranes, wild geese, wild
ducks, and the like; their perpetual clamour prevents them
from dispersing and losing their companions.
In so extensive a subject, sketches and outlines are as
much as can be expected, for it would be endless to instance
in all the infinite variety of the feathered nation. We shall
therefore confine the remainder of this letter to the few
domestic fowls of our yards, which are most known and
therefore best understood. And first the peacock, with his
gorgeous train, demands our attention ; but, like most of
the gaudy birds, his notes are grating and shocking to the
ear : the yelling of cats, and the braying of an ass, are not
more disgustful. The voice of the goose is trumpet-like, and
clanking; and once saved the Capitol at Rome, as grave
historians assert: the hiss also of the gander is formidable
and full of menace, and " protective of his young." Among
ducks the sexual distinction of voice is remarkable ; for while
the quack of the female is loud and sonorous, the voice of
the drake is inward and harsh, and feeble, and scarce dis-
cernible. The cock turkey struts and gobbles to his mistress
in a most uncouth manner; he hath also a pert and petulant
note when he attacks his adversary. When a hen turkey
leads forth her young brood she keeps a watchful eye ; and
if a bird of prey appear, though ever so high in the air, the
careful mother announces the enemy with a little inward
moan, and watches him with a steady and attentive look ;
but, if he approach, her note becomes earnest and alarming,
and her outcries are redoubled.
No inhabitants of a yard seem possessed of such a variety
of expression and so copious a language as common poultry.
Take a chicken of four or five days old, and hold it up to a
window where there are flies, and it will immediately seize
its prey, with little twitterings of complacency; but if you
tender it a wasp or a bee, at once its note becomes harsh
and expressive of disapprobation and a sense of danger.
S
258 NATURAL HISTORY
When a pullet is ready to lay, she intimates the event by a
joyous and easy soft note. Of all the occurrences of their
life that of laying seems to be the most important ; for no
sooner has a hen disburdened herself, than she rushes forth
with a clamorous kind of joy, which the cock and the rest
of his mistresses immediately adopt. The tumult is not
confined to the family concerned, but catches from yard to
yard, and spreads to every homestead within hearing-, till
at last the whole village is in an uproar. As soon as a hen
becomes a mother, her new relation demands a new language ;
she then runs clucking and screaming about, and seems
agitated as if possessed. The father of the flock has also a
considerable vocabulary : if he finds food, he calls a favourite
concubine to partake ; and if a bird of prey passes over, with
a warning voice he bids his family beware. The gallant
chanticleer has, at command, his amorous phrases and his
terms of defiance. But the sound by which he is best
known is his crowing ; by this he has been distinguished in
all ages as the countryman's clock or larum, as the watch-
man that proclaims the divisions of the night. Thus the
poet elegantly styles him
" the crested cock, whose clarion sounds
The silent hours."
A neighbouring gentleman one summer had lost most of
his chickens by a sparrow-hawk, that came gliding down
between a faggot pile and the end of his house to the place
where the coops stood. The owner, inwardly vexed to see his
flock thus diminishing, hung a setting net adroitly between
the pile and the house, into which the caitiff dashed, and
was entangled. Eesentment suggested the law of retalia-
tion: he therefore clipped the hawk's wings, cut off his talons,
and fixing a cork on his bill, threw him down among the
brood-hens. Imagination cannot paint the scene that
ensued ; the expressions that fear, rage, and revenge in-
spired were new, or at least such as had been unnoticed
before : the exasperated matrons upbraided, they execrated,
they insulted, they triumphed. In a word, they never de-
sisted from buffeting their adversary till they had torn him
in a hundred pieces.
OF SELBORSE. 259
LETTER XLIY.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNEi
monstrent
Quid tantum Oceano properent se tingere soles
Hyberni ; vel quae tardis mora noctibus obstet."
ENTLEMEN who have outlets might contrive
to make ornament subservient to utility : a
pleasing eyetrap might also contribute to
promote science : an obelisk in a garden
or park might be both an embellishment
and a heliotrope.
Any person that is curious, and enjoys the advantage of
a good horizon, might, with little trouble, make two helio-
tropes ; the one for the winter, the other for the summer
solstice : and these two erections might be constructed with
very little expense, for two pieces of timber framework,
about ten or twelve feet high, and four feet broad at the
base, and close lined with plank, would answer the purpose.
The erection for the former should, if possible, be placed
within sight of some window in the common sitting parlour,
because men, at that dead season of the year, are usually
within doors at the close of the day ; while that for the
latter might be fixed for any given spot in the garden or
outlet, whence the owner might contemplate, in a fine
summer's evening, the utmost extent that the sun makes
to the northward at the season of the longest days. Now
nothing would be necessary but to place these two objects
with so much exactness that the westerly limb of the sun,
at setting, might but just clear the winter heliotrope to the
west of it on the shortest day, and that the whole disc of
the sun, at the longest day, might exactly at setting also
clear the summer heliotrope to the north of it.
260 NATURAL HISTORY
By this simple expedient it would soon appear that there
is no such thing, strictly speaking, as a solstice : for, from
the shortest day, the owner would, every clear evening, see
the disc advancing, at its setting, to the westward of the
object; and, from the longest day, observe the sun retiring
backwards every evening at its setting towards the object
westward, till, in a few nights, it would set quite behind it,
and so by degrees to the west of it : for when the sun
comes near the summer solstice, the whole disc of it would
at first set behind the object. After a time, the northern
limb would first appear, and so every night gradually more,
till at length the whole diameter would set northward of it
for about three nights; but on the middle night of the
three, sensibly more remote than the former or following.
When beginning its recess from the summer tropic, it would
continue more and more to be hidden every night, till at
length it would descend quite behind the object again; and
so nightly more and more to the westward.
LETTER XLY.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAIKES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE.
" Mug-ire videbis
Sub pedibus terrain, et descendere montibus ornos."
HEN I was a boy, I used to read, with
astonishment and implicit assent, accounts
in Baker's Chronicle of walking hills and
travelling mountains. John Philips, in his
" Cider/; alludes to the credit that was given
to such stories with a delicate but quaint vein of humour
peculiar to the author of the " Splendid Shilling."
'* I nor advise, nor reprehend, the choice
Of Marcley Hill ; the apple nowhere finds
A kinder mould : yet 'tis nnsafe to trust
Deceitful ground : who knows but that, once more,
OF SELJ30ENE. 261
This mount may journey, and, his present site
Forsaking, to thy neighbour's bounds transfer
The goodly plants, affording matter strange
For law debates ! "
But, when I came to consider better, I began to suspect
that though our hills may never have journeyed far, yet that
the ends of many of them have slipped and fallen away at
distant periods, leaving the cliffs bare and abrupt. This
seems to have been the case with Nore and Whetham Hills,
and especially with the ridge between Harteley Park and
Word-le-ham, where the ground has slid into vast swellings
and furrows, and lies still in such romantic confusion as
cannot be accounted for from any other cause. A strange
event, that happened not long since, justifies our suspicions,
which, though it befell not within the limits of this parish,
yet, as it was within the hundred of Selborne, and as the
circumstances were singular, may fairly claim a place in a
work of this nature.
The months of January and February, in the year 1774,
were remarkable for great melting snows and vast gluts of
rain; so that, by the end of the latter month, the land-
springs, or lavants, began to prevail, and to be near as high
as in the memorable winter of 1764. The beginning of
March also went on in the same tenor, when, in the night
between the 8th and 9th of that month, a considerable part
of the great woody hanger at Hawkley was torn from its
place, and fell down, leaving a high free-stone cliff naked
and bare, and resembling the steep side of a chalk-pit. It
appears that this huge fragment, being perhaps sapped and
undermined by waters, foundered, and was ingulfed, going
down in a perpendicular direction ; for a gate which stood
in the field, on the top of the hill, after sinking with its
posts for thirty or forty feet, remained in so true and
upright a position as to open and shut with great exactness,
just as in its first situation. Several oaks also are still
standing, and in a state of vegetation, after taking the
same desperate leap. That great part of this prodigious
mass was absorbed in some gulf below is plain also from the
inclining ground at the bottom of the hill, which is free and
:262 NATURAL HISTORY
unencumbered, but would have been buried in heaps of
rubbish, had the fragment parted and fallen forward.1
About a hundred yards from the foot of this hanging-
coppice stood a cottage by the side of a lane ; and two
hundred yards lower, on the other side of the lane, was a
/arm-house, in which lived a labourer and his family; and
just by, a stout new barn. The cottage was inhabited by
an old woman and her son, and his wife. These people, in
the evening, which was very dark and tempestuous, observed
that the brick floors of their kitchens began to heave and
part, and that the walls seemed to open, and the roofs to
crack ; but they all agreed that no tremor of the ground,
indicating an earthquake, was ever felt, only that the wind
continued to make a most tremendous roaring in the woods
and hangers. The miserable inhabitants, not daring to go
to bed, remained in the utmost solicitude and confusion, ex-
pecting every moment to be buried under the ruins of their
shattered edifices. When daylight came they were at leisure
to contemplate the devastations of the night. They then
1 In a note to this passage Mr. Bennett expresses the opinion that it
i? not necessary to assume the existence of a gulf into which the mass
was absorbed. The geological relations of the strata, he says, point to
a much easier, as well as a more correct, explanation of the occurrence.
Here, as elsewhere throughout the district, the malm rock or freestone
of the upper greensand formation rests upon the gault or blue clay : a
rock upon a yielding base. An adequate weight, placed upon so unfirm
a soil as the lower of these formations, must of necessity sink into it.
So prodigious a mass as that which, on the occasion described in the
text, was separated from its adhesion to its native rock, and left to be
supported by the soft clay alone, was more than its pulpy nature could
support, and it gave way accordingly ; receiving into its yielding sub-
stance, and burying almost entirely beneath its surface the detached
face of the cliff, which subsided into it so easily and so perpendicularly
as not to disturb the adjustment of a gate upon the sunken mass, once
on the top, and now at the foot of the escarpment.
In other situations, and particularly on the southern coast of the Isle
of Wight, slips similar to that of Hawkley have taken place, and from
the same cause : either the separation of a portion of the freestone rock
of the upper greensand formation and its subsidence into the gault ; or
the loosening of the gault, and the subsequent separation and subsidence
of a portion of the freestone, which could no longer be supported when
its natural foundation had thus given way. — ED.
OF SELBORNE.
263
found that a deep rift or chasm had opened under their
houses, and torn them, as it were, in two ; and that one end
of the barn had suffered in a similar manner ; that a pond
near the cottage had undergone a strange reverse, becoming
deep at the shallow end, and so vice versa; that many large
oaks were removed out of their perpendicular, some thrown
down, and some fallen into the heads of neighbouring trees;
and that a gate was thrust forward, with its hedge, full six
HAWKLEY SLIP.
feet, so as to require a new track to be made to it. From
the foot of the cliff, the general course of the ground, which
is pasture, inclines in a moderate descent for half a mile,
and is interspersed with some hillocks, which were rifted in
every direction, as well towards the great woody hanger as
from it. In the first pasture the deep clefts began; and
running across the lane, and under the buildings, made such
vast 'shelves that the road was impassable for some time;
and so over to an arable field on the other side, which was
strangely torn and disordered. The second pasture field,
264 NATURAL HISTORY
being more soft and springy, was protruded forward without
many fissures in the turf, which was raised in long ridges
resembling graves, lying at right angles to the motion. At
the bottom of this enclosure, the soil and turf rose many
feet against the bodies of some oaks that obstructed their
farther course, and terminated this awful commotion.
The perpendicular height of the precipice, in general, is
twenty-three yards : the length of the lapse, or slip, as
seen from the fields below, one hundred and eighty-one ;
and a partial fall, concealed in the coppice, extends seventy
yards more ; so that the total length of this fragment that
fell was two hundred and fifty-one yards. About fifty acres
of land suffered from this violent convulsion : two houses
were entirely destroyed ; one end of a new barn was left in
ruins, the walls being cracked through the very stones that
composed them ; a hanging coppice was changed to a naked
rock ; and some grass grounds and an arable field so broken
and rifted by the chasms as to be rendered, for a time,
neither fit for the plough nor safe for pasturage, till con-
siderable labour and expense had been bestowed in levelling
the surface and filling in the gaping fissures.
LETTER XLVI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE.
resonant arbusta —
HERE is a steep abrupt pasture field inter-
spersed with furze close to the back of this
village, well known by the name of tho Short
Lithe, consisting of a rocky dry soil, and
inclining to the afternoon sun. This spot
abounds with the Gryllus campestris, or field cricket, which,
though frequent in these parts, is by no means a common
insect in many other counties.
OF SELBORNE. 265
As their cheerful summer cry cannot but draw the
attention of a naturalist, I have often gone down to examine
the economy of these grylli, and study their mode of life ;
but they are so shy and cautious that it is no easy matter to
get a sight of them ; for, feeling a person's footsteps as he
advances, they stop short in the midst of their song, and
retire backward nimbly into their burrows, where they lurk
till all suspicion of danger is over.
At first we attempted to dig them out with a spade, but
without any great success : for either we could not get to
the bottom of the hole, which often terminated under a
great stone ; or else, in breaking up the ground, we inad-
FIELI) CRICKET.
vertently squeezed the poor insect to death. Out of one so
bruised we took a multitude of eggs, which were long and
narrow, of a yellow colour, and covered with a very tough
skin. By this accident we learned to distinguish the male
from the female : the former of which is shining black,
with a golden stripe across his shoulders ; the latter is more
dusky, more capacious about the abdomen, and carries a
long sword-shaped weapon at her tail, which probably is
the instrument with which she deposits her eggs in crannies
and safe receptacles.
Where violent methods will not avail, more gentle means
will often succeed ; and so it proved in the present case :
for though a spade be too boisterous and rough an imple-
ment, a pliant stalk of grass, gently insinuated into the
caverns, will probe their windings to the bottom, and quickly
2GG NATURAL HISTORY
bring out tlie inhabitant ; and thus the humane inquirer
may gratify his curiosity without injuring the object of it.
It is remarkable that, though these insects are furnished
with long legs behind, and brawny thighs for leaping, like
grasshoppers, yet when driven from their holes they show
no activity, but crawl along in a shiftless manner, so as
easily to be taken; and again, though provided with a
curious apparatus of wings, yet they never exert them when
there seems to be the greatest occasion. The males only
make that shrilling noise, perhaps out of rivalry and
emulation, as is the case with many animals which exert
some sprightly note during their breeding time : it is raised
by a brisk friction of one wing against the other. They
are solitary beings, living singly, male or female, each as it
may happen ; but there must be a time when they pair, and
then the wings may be useful, perhaps during the hours of
night. When the males meet they will fight fiercely, as I
found by some which I put into the crevices of a dry stone
wall, where I should have been glad to have made them
settle. For though they seemed distressed by being taken
out of their knowledge, yet the first that got possession of
the chinks would seize on any that were obtruded upon
them with a vast row of serrated fangs. With their strong
jaws, toothed like the shears of a lobster's claws, they
perforate and round their curious regular cells, having no
fore-claws to dig like the mole cricket. When taken in
hand, I could not but wonder that they never offered to
defend themselves, though armed with such formidable
weapons. Of such herbs as grow before the mouths of
their burrows they eat indiscriminately ; and on a little
platform, which they make just by, they drop their dung ;
and never, in the daytime, seem to stir more than two or
three inches from home. Sitting in the entrance of their
caverns, they chirp all night as well as day from the
middle of the month of May to the middle of July ; and in
hot weather, when they are most vigorous, they make the
hills echo ; and, in the stiller hours of darkness, may be
heard to a considerable distance. In the beginning of the
season their notes are more faint and inward ; but become
OF SELBOENE. 267
louder as the summer advances, and so die away again by
degrees.
Sounds do not always give us pleasure according to tlieir
sweetness and melody, nor do harsh sounds always dis-
please. We are more apt to be captivated or disgusted
with the associations which they promote, than with the
notes themselves. Thus the shrilling of the field-cricket,
though sharp and stridulous, yet marvellously delights
some hearers, filling their minds with a train of summer
ideas of everything that is rural, verdurous, and joyous.
About the 10th of March the crickets appear at the
mouths of their cells, which they then open and bore, and
shape very elegantly. All that I ever have seen at that
season were in their pupa state, and had only the rudiments
of wings lying under a skin or coat, which must be cast
before the insect can arrive at its perfect state;1 from
whence I should suppose that the old ones of last year do
not always survive the winter. In August their holes
begin to be obliterated, and the insects are seen no more
till spring.
Not many summers ago I endeavoured to transplant a
Colony to the terrace in my garden, by boring deep holes in
the sloping turf. The new inhabitants stayed some time,
and fed and sung, but wandered away by degrees, and were
heard at a farther distance every morning; so that it
appears that on this emergency they made use of their
wings in attempting to return to the spot from which they
were taken.
One of these crickets, when confined in a paper cage and
set in the sun, and supplied with plants moistened with
water, will feed and thrive, and become so merry and loud
as to be irksome in the same room where a person is sitting :
if the plants are not wetted it will die.
1 We have observed that they cast these skins in April, which are
then seen lying at the mouths of their holes. — G. W.
268 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER XLVII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARHIXGTON.
SELBORNE.
" Far from all resort of mirth,
Save the cricket on the hearth."
MILTON'S 77 Penseroso.
HILE many other insects must be sought
after in fields, and woods, and waters, the
Gryllus domesticuSj or house-cricket, resides
altogether within our dwellings, intruding
itself upon our notice, whether we will or no.
This species delights in new-built houses, being, like the
spider, pleased with the moisture of the walls ; and besides,
the softness of the mortar enables them to burrow and mine
between the joints of the bricks or stones, and to open
communications from one room to another. They are par-
ticularly fond of kitchens and bakers' ovens, on account of
their perpetual warmth.
Tender insects that live abroad either enjoy only the
short period of one summer, or else doze away the cold un-
comfortable months in profound slumbers ; but these, residing
as it were in a torrid zone, are always alert and merry : a
good Christmas fire is to them like the heats of the dog-days.
Though they are frequently heard by day, yet is their
natural time of motion only in the night. As soon as it
grows dusk, the chirping increases, and they come running
forth, and are from the size of a flea to that of their full
stature. As one should suppose, from the burning atmo-
sphere which they inhabit, they are a thirsty race, and show
a great propensity for liquids, being found frequently
drowned in pans of water, milk, broth, or the like. What-
ever is moist they affect ; and, therefore, often gnaw holes
in wet woollen stockings and aprons that are hung to the
fire : they are the housewife's barometer, foretelling her
OF SELBORNE. 269
when it will rain, and are prognostic sometimes, she thinks,
of ill or good luck ; of the death of a near relation, or the
approach of an absent lover. By being the constant com-
panions of her solitary hours, they naturally become the
objects of her superstition. These crickets are not only
very thirsty, but very voracious; for they will eat the
scummings of pots, and yeast, salt, and crumbs of bread,
and any kitchen offal or sweepings. In the summer we
have observed them to fly, when it became dusk, out of
the windows, and over the neighbouring roofs. This feat
of activity accounts for the sudden manner in which they
often leave their haunts, as it does for the method by which
they come to houses where they were not known before. It
is remarkable that many sorts of insects seem never to use
their wings but when they have a mind to sjiift their quar-
HOUSE CRICKET.
ters and settle new colonies. When in the air they move
volatu undoso, in waves or curves, like woodpeckers, opening
and shutting their wings at every stroke, and so are always
rising or sinking.
When they increase to a great degree, as they did once
in the house where I am now writing, they become noisome
pests, flying into the candles and dashing into people's
faces, but may be blasted and destroyed by gunpowder
discharged into their crevices and crannies. In families, at
such times, they are, like Pharaoh's plague of frogs, "in
their bed-chambers and upon their beds, and in their ovens,
and in their kneading- troughs.-"1 Their shrilling noise is
occasioned by a brisk attrition of their wings. Cats catch
hearth- crickets, and, playing with them as they do with
1 Exod. viii. 3.
270 NATURAL HISTORY
mice, devour them. Crickets may be destroyed, like wasps,
by phials half filled with beer, or any liquid, and set in their
haunts ; for, being always eager to drink, they will crowd
in till the bottles are full.1
LETTER XLVIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE.
OW diversified are the modes of life not
only of incongruous but even of congenerous
animals ; and yet their specific distinctions
are not more various than their propensities.
Thus, while the field-cricket delights in sunny
dry banks, and the house-cricket rejoices amidst the glowing
heat of the kitchen hearth or oven, the Gryllus gryttotalpa*
or mole cricket, haunts moist meadows, and frequents the
sides of ponds and banks of streams, performing all its
functions in a swampy wet soil. With a pair of fore-feet,
curiously adapted to the purpose, it burrows and works
under ground like the mole, raising a ridge as it proceeds,
but seldom throwing up hillocks.
As mole-crickets often infest gardens by the sides of
canals, they are unwelcome guests to the gardener, raising
up ridges in their subterraneous progress, and rendering
the walks unsightly. If they take to the kitchen quarters,
they occasion great damage among the plants and roots, by
destroying whole beds of cabbages, young legumes, and
flowers. When dug out they seem very slow and helpless,
and make no use of their wings by day, but at night they
come abroad and make long excursions, as I have been con-
1 Some additional particulars respecting the house-cricket will be
found hereafter in the Observations on Insects. — ED.
2 Gryttotalpa vulgaris, LATR. — ED.
OF SELBOENE.
271
vinced by finding stragglers in a morning in improbable
places. In fine weather, about the middle of April, and
just at the close of day, they begin to solace themselves
with a low, dull, jarring note, continued for a long time
without interruption, and not unlike the chattering of the
fern-owl or goat- sucker, but more inward.
MOLE CRICKET AND NEST.
About the beginning of May they lay their eggs, as I
was once an eye-witness ; for a gardener, at a house where
I was on a visit, happening to be mowing, on the 6th of that
month, by the side of a canal, his scythe struck too deep,
pared off a large piece of turf, and laid open to view a
curious scene of domestic economy :
" in^entem lato dedit ore fenestram :
Apparet doinus intus, et atria longa patescunt :
Apparent penetralia."
There were many caverns and winding passages leading
to a kind of chamber, neatly smoothed and rounded, and
about the size of a moderate snuff-box. Within this secret
272 NATURAL HISTORY
nursery were deposited near a hundred eggs of a dirty yellow
colour, and enveloped in a tough skin, but too lately ex-
cluded to contain any rudiments of young, being full of a
viscous substance. The egga lay but shallow, and within
the influence of the sun, just under a little heap of fresh
moved mould, like that which is raised by ants.
When mole crickets fly, they move cursu undoso, rising
and falling in curves, like the other species mentioned
before. In different parts of this kingdom people call them
fen crickets, churr worms, and eve churrs, all very apposite
names.
Anatomists, who have examined the intestines of these
insects, astonish me with their accounts ; for they say that,
from the structure, position, and number of their stomachs,
or maws, there seems to be good reason to suppose that
this and the two former species ruminate or chew the cud
like many quadrupeds ! !
1 In tlie Hunterian Collection are preparations of the singularly
complex stomach here alluded to as it exists in the mole cricket
(No. 611) and in the locust (Nos. 474, 610). "The structure," says
Professor Owen, in a note to this passage, " is similar in both, as
to the number of cavities, but differs in their relative positions. The
first cavity, or crop, is formed in the locust by a gradual dilatation of
the gullet ; but in the mole cricket it is appended, like the crop of a
granivorous bird, to one side of the gullet, communicating with it bv
a lateral opening. The canal which intervenes between the crop and
gizzard is relatively longer in the mole cricket than in the locust. Its
gi/zard is small, but armed internally with longitudinal rows of com-
plex teeth. Two large lateral pouches open into the lower part, or
termination, of the gizzard. The analogy between this digestive appa-
ratus and that of the ruminants is vague, and does not extend beyond
the number of cavities. It is more like that of the bird ; and since the
comminuting or masticating organs are situated, as in the feathered
class, in the stomach, it cannot be supposed that the food is again re-
turned to the mouth, where it has already received all the division
which the oral instruments can effect." — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 273
LETTER XLIX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, May 7, 1779.
>T is now more than forty years that I have
paid some attention to the ornithology of
this district, without being able to exhaust
the subject : new occurrences stiU arise as
long as any inquiries are kept alive.
In the last week of last month five of those most rare
birds, too uncommon to have obtained an English name,
but known to naturalists by the terms of Himantopus, or
Loripes, and Cliaradrius Himantopus,1 were shot upon the
verge of Frinsham Pond, a large lake belonging to the
Bishop of Winchester, and lying between Wolmer Forest
and the town of Farnham, in the county of Surrey. Tho
pond-keeper says there were three brace in the flock ; but
that, after he had satisfied his curiosity, he suffered the
sixth to remain unmolested. One of these specimens I
procured, and found the length of the legs to be so extra-
ordinary, that, at first sight, one might have supposed the
shanks had been fastened on to impose on the credulity of the
beholder : they were legs in caricatura ; and had we seen
such proportions on a Chinese or Japan screen we should
have made large allowances for the fancy of the draughts-
man. These birds are of the plover family, and might with
propriety be called the stilt plovers. Brisson, under that
idea, gives them the apposite name of L'Echasse. My
specimen, when drawn and stuffed with pepper, weighed
only four ounces and a quarter ; though the naked part of
the thigh measured three inches and a half, and the legs
1 Himantopus candidus, Bonnaterre ; H. melanopterus, Temminck. In
the first edition of the present work, which appeared in quarto in 1789,
amongst other illustrations is a full-page one of this singular-looking
bird. — ED.
T
274 NATURAL HISTORY
four inches and a half. Hence we may safely assert that
these birds exhibit, weight for inches, incomparably the
greatest length of legs of any known bird. The flamingo,
for instance, is one of the most long-legged birds, and yet
it bears no manner of proportion to the Himantopus ; for a
cock flamingo weighs, at an average, about four pounds
avoirdupois ; and his legs and thighs measure usually about
twenty inches. But four pounds are fifteen times and a frac-
tion more than four ounces and one quarter; and if four
ounces and a quarter have eight inches of legs, four pounds
must have one hundred and twenty inches and a fraction of
legs ; viz. somewhat more than ten feet ; such a monstrous
proportion as the world never saw ! If you should try the
experiment in still larger birds, the disparity would still
increase. It must be matter of great curiosity to see the
stilt plover move ; to observe how it can wield such a length
of lever with such feeble muscles as the thighs seem to be
furnished with. At best one should expect it to be but a
bad walker : but what adds to the wonder is, that it has no
back toe. Now without that steady prop to support its
steps it must be liable, in speculation, to perpetual vacil-
lations, and seldom able to preserve the true centre of
gravity.
The old name of Himantopus is taken from Pliny ; and,
by an awkward metaphor, implies that the legs are as
slender and pliant as if cut out of a thong of leather.
Neither Willughby nor Ray, in all their curious researches,
either at home or abroad, ever saw this bird. Mr. Pennant
never met with it in all Great Britain, but observed it often
in the cabinets of the curious at Paris. Hasselquist says
that it migrates to Egypt in the autumn : and a most accu-
rate observer of nature has assured me that he has found it
on the banks of the streams in Andalusia.
Our writers record it to have been found only twice in
Great Britain.1 From all these relations it plainly appears
1 The two specimens here referred to are doubtless those recorded
by Sibbald and Pennant as having been procured near Dumfries
(cf. Sibbald, " Hist. Scot." lib. iii. p. 18 ; and Pennant, " Caledonian
OF SELBORNE.
275
that these long-legged plovers are birds of South Europe,
and rarely visit our island ; and when they do, are wan-
derers and stragglers, and impelled to make so distant and
northern an excursion from motives or accidents for which
we are not able to account. One thing may fairly be
BLACK-WINGED STILT.
deduced, that these birds come over to us from the conti-
nent, since nobody can suppose that a species not noticed
once in an age, and of such a remarkable make, can con-
stantly breed unobserved in this kingdom.
Zoology," p. 35, pi. 4). Gilbert White's notice of this species was the
next in order of date, and since that time some thirty additional in-
stances of its occurrence have been placed on record (cf. " Handbook
of British Birds," pp. 135, 136). One of these relates to the occur-
rence of a specimen in 1832 at the very pond where some fifty years
previously it had been noticed by White. The author of " Ornitho-
logical Rambles in Sussex" has given a very pleasing account of the
habits of this singular bird, as observed on its occurrence in Sussex, in
the "Ibis" for 1859 (p. 395), to which account the reader would do
well to refer. — ED.
276 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER L.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, April 21, 1780.
HE old Sussex tortoise, that I have mentioned
to you so often, is become my property. I
dug it out of its winter dormitory in March
last, when it was enough awakened to ex-
press its resentment by hissing ; and, pack-
ing it in a box with earth, carried it eighty miles in post
chaises. The rattle and hurry of the journey so perfectly
roused it, that, when I turned it out on a border, it walked
twice down to the bottom of my garden : however, in the
evening, the weather being cold, it buried itself in the loose
mould, and continues still concealed.
As it will be under my eye, I shall now have an oppor-
tunity of enlarging my observations on its mode of life and
propensities ; and perceive already that, towards the time of
coming forth, it opens a breathing place in the ground near
its head, requiring, I conclude, a freer respiration as it
becomes more alive. This creature not only goes under
the earth from the middle of November to the middle of
April, but sleeps great part of the summer ; for it goes to
bed in the longest days at four in the afternoon, and often
does not stir in the morning till late. Besides, it retires
to rest for every shower ; and does not move at all in wet
days.
When one reflects on the state of this strange being, it
is a matter of wonder to find that Providence should bestow
such a profusion of days, such a seeming waste of longevity,
on a reptile that appears to relish it so little as to squander
more than two- thirds of its existence in a joyless stupor,
and be lost to all sensation for months together in the pro-
foundest of slumbers.
While I was writing this letter, a moist and warm after-
OF SELBORNE. 277
noon, with the thermometer at 50°, brought forth troops of
shell-snails ; and, at the same juncture, the tortoise heaved
up the mould and put out its head ; and the next morning
came forth, as it were raised from the dead ; and walked
about till four in the afternoon. This was a curious coin-
cidence ! a very amusing occurrence ! to see such a simi-
larity of feelings between the two (p*pf««xot ! for so the
Greeks call both the shell- snail and the tortoise.
Summer birds are, this cold and backward spring, un-
usually late : I have seen but one swallow yet. This con-
formity with the weather convinces me more and more that
they sleep in the winter.1
More particulars respecting the old family tortoise.
THE SHELL OF GILBERT WHITE S TORTOISE.
Because we call this creature an abject reptile, we are
too apt to undervalue his abilities, and depreciate his powers
of instinct. Yet he is, as Mr. Pope says of his lord,
" Much too wise to walk into a well : "
and has so much discernment as not to fall down a haha ;
but to stop and withdraw from the brink with the readiest
precaution.
Though he loves warm weather, he avoids the hot sun ;
because his thick shell, when once heated, would, as the
poet says of solid armour — " scald with safety." He
therefore spends the more sultry hours under the umbrella
1 In the original 4to. this letter ends here, and the " particulars"
which follow are given by way of supplement at the end of tht Antiquities.
It seems more appropriate, however, to reprint them here. — ED.
278 NATURAL HISTORY
of a large cabbage leaf, or amidst the waving forests of an
asparagus bed.
But as he avoids heat in the summer, so, in the decline
of the year, he improves the faint autumnal beams, by
getting within the reflection of a fruit- wall: and, though
he never has read that planes inclining to the horizon
receive a greater share of warmth,1 he inclines his shell,
by tilting it against the wall, to collect and admit every
feeble ray.
Pitiable seems the condition of this poor embarrassed
reptile ; to be cased in a suit of ponderous armour, which
he cannot lay aside ; to be imprisoned, as it were, within
his own shell, must preclude, we should suppose, all
activity and disposition for enterprise. Yet there is a
season of the year -(usually the beginning of June) when
his exertions are remarkable. He then walks on tiptoe,
and is stirring by five in the morning ; and, traversing the
garden, examines every wicket and interstice in the fences,
through which he will escape if possible; and often has
eluded the care of the gardener, and wandered to some
distant field. The motives that impel him to undertake
these rambles seem to be of the amorous kind : his fancy
then becomes intent on sexual attachments, which transport
him beyond his usual gravity, and induce him to forget for
a time his ordinary solemn deportment.2
1 Several years ago a book was written entitled " Fruit-walls im-
proved by inclining them to the Horizon : " in which the author has
shown, by calculation, that a much greater number of the rays of the
sun will fall on such walls than on those which are perpendicular. —
G. W.
2 This tortoise survived its master about a year, dying, it is
believed, in the spring of 1794, after an existence in England of about
fifty-four years, the last fourteen of which were spent at Selborne. Its
shell, which is still preserved at Selborne, in the residence of the
former owner, is considered by Mr. Bell to be that of Testudo mar-
ginata, the largest of the three European tortoises ; but Mr. Bennett,
for reasons stated by him in a note to this passage in his edition of the
present work, was of opinion that it should be referred to a distinct
species, and he proposed for it the specific name Whitei, in compliment
to our author. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 279
LETTER LI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
SELBORNE, Sept. 3, 1781.
HAVE now read your Miscellanies through
with much care and satisfaction ; and am to
return you my best thanks for the honour-
able mention made in them of me as a
naturalist, which I wish I may deserve.
In some former letters I expressed my suspicions that
many of the house martins do not depart in the winter far
from this village. I therefore determined to make some
search about the south-east end of the hill, where I
imagined they might slumber out the uncomfortable months
of winter. But supposing that the examination would be
made to the best advantage in the spring, and observing
that no martins had appeared by the llth of April last; on
that day I employed some men to explore the shrubs and
cavities of the suspected spot. The persons took pains,
but without any success ; however, a remarkable incident
occurred in the midst of our pursuit — while the labourers
were at work, a house martin, the first that had been seen
this year, came down the village in the sight of several
people, and went at once »into a nest, where it stayed a
short time, and then flew over the houses ; for some days
after no martins were observed, not till the 16th of April,
and then only a pair. Martins in general were remarkably
late this year.
280 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER LII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BAREINGTON.
SELBORNE, Sept. 9, 1781.
HAVE just met with a circumstance respect-
ing swifts, which furnishes .an exception to
the whole tenor of my observations ever
since I have bestowed any attention on that
species of Hirundines. Our swifts, in gene-
ral, withdrew this year about the first day of August, all
save one pair, which in two or three days was reduced to a
single bird. The perseverance of this individual made me
suspect that the strongest of motives, that of an attach-
ment to her young, could alone occasion so late a stay. I
watched therefore till the 24th of August, and then dis-
covered that, under the eaves of the church, she attended
upon two young, which were fledged, and now put out
their white chins from a crevice. These remained till the
27th, looking more alert every day, and seeming to long to
be on the wing. After this day they were missing at
once; nor could I ever observe them with their dam
coursing round the church in the act of learning to fly, as
the first broods evidently do. On the 31st I caused the
eaves to be searched, but we found in the nest only two
callow, dead, stinking swifts, on which a second nest had
been formed. This double nest was full of the black
shining cases of the Hippobosca hirundinis.
The following remarks on this unusual incident are
obvious. The first is, that though it may be disagreeable
to swifts to remain beyond the beginning of August, yet
that they can subsist longer is undeniable. The second is,
that this uncommon event, as it was owing to the loss of
the first brood, so it corroborates my former remark, that
swifts breed regularly but once ; since, was the contrary the
case, the occurrence above could neither be new nor rare.
P.S. One swift was seen at Lyndon, in the county of
Rutland, in 1782, so late as the 3rd of September.
OF SELB011NE. 281
LETTER LIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
S I have sometimes known you make in-
quiries about several kinds of insects, I shall
here send you an account of one sort which
I little expected to have found in this king-
dom.. I had often observed that one par-
ticular part of a vine growing on the walls of my house
was covered in the autumn with a black, dustlike appear-
ance, on which the flies fed eagerly ; and that the shoots
and leaves thus affected did not thrive ; nor did the fruit
ripen. To this substance I applied my glasses ; but could
not discover that it had anything to do with animal life, as
I at first expected : but, upon a closer examination behind
the larger boughs, we were surprised to find that they were
coated over with husky shells, from whose sides proceeded
a cotton-like substance, surrounding a multitude of eggs.
This curious and uncommon production put me upon
recollecting what I have heard and read concerning the
Coccus vitis viniferce of Linnasus, which, in the south of
Europe, infests many vines, and is a horrid and loathsome
pest. As soon as I had turned to the accounts given of
this insect, I saw at once that it swarmed on my vine ; and
did not appear to have been at all checked by the pre-
ceding winter, which had been uncommonly severe.
Not being then at all aware that it had anything to do
with England, I was much inclined to think that it came
from Gibraltar among the many boxes and packages of
plants and birds which I had formerly received from
thence ; and especially as the vine infested grew im-
mediately under my study-window, where I usually kept
my specimens. True it is that I had received nothing
from thence for some years : but as insects, we know, are
conveyed from one country to another in a very unex-
282 NATURAL HISTORY
pected manner, and have a wonderful power of maintaining
their existence till they fall into a nidus proper for their
support and increase, I cannot but suspect still that these
Cocci came to me originally from Andalusia. Yet, all the
while, candour obliges me to confess that Mr. Lightfoot has
written me word, that he once, and but once, saw these
insects on a vine at Weymouth in Dorsetshire ; which, it is
here to be observed, is a seaport town to which the Coccus
might be conveyed by shipping.
As many of my readers may possibly never have heard
of this strange and unusual insect, I shall here transcribe a
passage from a natural history of Gibraltar, written by the
Eeverend John White, late vicar of Blackburn in Lan-
cashire, but not yet published : —
" In the year 1770 a vine which grew on the east side of
my house, and which had produced the finest crops of
grapes for years past, was suddenly overspread on all the
woody branches with large lumps of a white fibrous sub-
stance resembling spiders' webs, or rather raw cotton. It
was of a very clammy quality, sticking fast to every thing
that touched it, and capable of being spun into long
threads. At first I suspected it to be the product of
spiders, but could find none. Nothing was to be seen
connected with it but many brown oval husky shells,
which by no means looked like insects, but rather resembled
bits of the dry bark of the vine. The tree had a plentiful
crop of grapes set, when this pest appeared upon it ; but
the fruit was manifestly injured by this foul incumbrance.
It remained all the summer, still increasing, and loaded the
woody and bearing branches to a vast degree. I often
pulled off great quantities by handfuls ; but it was so slimy
and tenacious that it could by no means be cleared. The
grapes never filled to their natural perfection, but turned
watery and vapid. Upon perusing the works afterwards
of M. de Reaumur, I found this matter perfectly described
and accounted for. Those husky shells, which I had ob-
served, were no other than the female Coccus, from whose
sides this cotton-like substance exudes, and serves as a
covering and security for their eggs."
OF SELSORNE. 283
To this account I think proper to add, that, although the
female Cocci are stationary, and seldom remove from the
place to which they stick, yet the male is a winged insect ;
and that the black dust which I saw was undoubtedly the
excrement of the females, which is eaten by ants as well as
flies. Though the utmost severity of our winter did not
destroy these insects, yet the attention of the gardener in a
summer or two has entirely relieved my vine from this filthy
annoyance.1
As we have remarked above, that insects are often con-
veyed from one country to another in a very unaccountable
manner, I shall here mention an emigration of small Aphides,
which was observed in the village of Selborne no longer
ago than August the 1st, 1785.
At about three o'clock in the afternoon of that day,
which was very hot, the people of this village were sur-
prised by a shower of Aphides, or smother-flies, which fell
in these parts. Those that were walking in the street at
that juncture found themselves covered with these insects,
which settled also on the hedges and gardens, blackening
all the vegetables where they alighted. My annuals were
discoloured with them, and the stalks of a bed of onions
were quite coated over for six days after. These armies
were then, no doubt, in a state of emigration, and shifting
their quarters ; and might have come, as far as we know,
from the great hop-plantations of Kent or Sussex, the wind
being all that day in the easterly quarter. They were ob-
served at the same time in great clouds about Farnham, and
all along the vale from Farnham to Alton.2
1 It is not usual, as Mr. Bennett has remarked, for the Coccus of the
vine to remain attached for several years in succession to a tree in the
open air in England, for the severity of the winter generally destroys it
at an early period. But to plants in greenhouses it often proves a
serious evil. It can scarcely be regarded as an indigenous insect, and
has probably been introduced into this country, from time to time, with
exotic plants. — ED.
2 For various methods by which several insects shift their quarters,
see Perham's Physico-Theology. — G. \V.
284 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER LIV.1
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRIXGTON.
I happen to visit a family where gold
and silver fishes are kept in a glass bowl, I
am always pleased with the occurrence,
because it offers me an opportunity of
observing the actions and propensities of
those beings with whom we can be little acquainted in
their natural state. Not long since I spent a fortnight
at the house of a friend where there was such a vivary, to
which I paid no small attention, taking every occasion to
remark what passed within its narrow limits. It was here
that I first observed the manner in which fishes die. As
soon as the creature sickens, the head sinks lower and lower,
and it stands, as it were, on its head, till, getting weaker,
and losing all poise, the tail turns over, and at last it floats
on the surface of the water with its belly uppermost. The
reason why fishes, when dead, swim in that manner is very
obvious, because, when the body is no longer balanced by
the fins of the belly, the broad muscular back preponderates
by its own gravity, and turns the belly uppermost, as lighter
from its being a cavity, and because it contains the swim-
ming-bladders, which contribute to render it buoyant.
Some that delight in gold and silver fishes have adopted a
notion that they need no aliment. True it is that they will
subsist for a long time without any apparent food but what
they can collect from pure water frequently changed ; yet
they must draw some support from animalcula and other
nourishment supplied by the water, because, though they
seem to eat nothing, yet the consequences of eating often
1 This letter was first published in the " Gentleman's Magazine " for
1786 (vol. Ivi. p. 488), with the date of June 12th, and under the signa-
ture of V. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 285
drop from them. That they are best pleased with such
jejune diet may easily be confuted, since, if you toss them
crumbs they will seize them with great readiness, not to say
greediness: however, bread should be given sparingly, lest,
turning sour, it corrupt the water. They will also feed on
the water-plant called Lemna (duck's meat), and also on
small fry.
When they want to move a little, they gently protrude
themselves with their pinnae pectorales ; but it is with their
strong muscular tails only that they and all fishes shoot
along with such inconceivable rapidity. It has been said
that the eyes of fishes are immoveable ; but these appa-
rently turn them forward or backward in their sockets as
their occasions require. They take little notice of a lighted
candle, though applied close to their heads, but flounce and
seem much frightened by a sudden stroke of the hand
against the support whereon the bowl is hung, especially
when they have been motionless, and are perhaps asleep.
As fishes have no eyelids, it is not easy to discern when
they are sleeping or not, because their eyes are always
open.
Nothing can be more amusing than a glass bowl contain-
ing such fishes : the double refractions of the glass and
water represent them, when moving, in a shifting and
changeable variety of dimensions, shades, and colours ;
while the two mediums, assisted by the concavo-convex
shape of the vessel, magnify and distort them vastly ; not
to mention that the introduction of another element and its
inhabitants into our parlours engages the fancy in a very
agreeable manner.
Gold and silver fishes, though originally natives of China
and Japan, yet are become so well reconciled to our climate
as to thrive and multiply very fast in our ponds and stews.
Linnseus ranks this species of fish under the genus of
Cyprinus, or carp, and calls it Cyprinus auratus.
Some people exhibit this sort of fish in a very fanciful
way, for they cause a glass bowl to be blown with a large
hollow space within, that does not communicate with it. In
this cavity they put a bird occasionally ; so that you may
286 NATURAL HISTORY
see a goldfinch or a linnet hopping, as it were, in the midst
of the water, and the fishes swimming in a circle round it.
The simple exhibition of the fishes is agreeable and pleasant,
but in so complicated a way becomes whimsical and un-
natural, and liable to the objection due to him,
" Qui variare cuoit rem prodigialiter unam."
LETTER LV.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
October 10, 1781. ,
THINK I have observed before that much
the most considerable part of the house
martins withdraw from hence about the first
week in October ; but that some, the latter
broods, I am now convinced, linger on till
towards the middle of that month ; and that at times, once
perhaps in two or three years, a flight, for one day only,
has shown itself in the first week in November.
Having taken notice, in October, 1780, that the last
flight was numerous, amounting perhaps to one hundred
and fifty, and that the season was soft and still, I was re-
solved to pay uncommon attention to these late birds, to
find, if possible, where they roosted, and to determine the
precise time of their retreat. The mode of life of these
latter Hirundines is very favourable to such a design, for
they spend the whole day in the sheltered districts, between
me and the Hanger, sailing about in a placid, easy manner,
and feasting on those insects which love to haunt a spot so
secure from ruffling winds. As my principal object was to
discover the place of their roosting, I took care to wait on
them before they retired to rest, and was much pleased
to find that, for several evenings together, just at a quarter
past five in the afternoon, they all scudded away in great
haste towards the south-east, and darted down among the
OF SELBORNE. 287
low shrubs above the cottages at the end of the hill. This
spot in many respects seems to be well calculated for their
winter residence: for in many parts it is as steep as the roof
of any house, and, therefore, secure from the annoyances of
water; and it is, moreover, clothed with beechen shrubs,
which, being stunted and bitten by sheep, make the thickest
covert imaginable, and are so entangled as to be impervious
to the smallest spaniel : besides, it is the nature of under-
wood beech never to cast its leaf all the winter, so that, with
the leaves on the ground, and those on the twigs, no shelter
can be more complete. I watched them on to the 13th and
14th of October, and found their evening retreat was exact
and uniform ; but after this they made no regular appear-
ance. Now and then a straggler was seen; and, on the
22nd of October, I observed two, in the morning, over the
village, and with them my remarks for the season ended.
From all these circumstances put together, it is more
than probable that this lingering flight, at so late a season
of the year, never departed from the island.1 Had they
indulged me that autumn with a November visit, as I much
desired, I presume that, with proper assistants, I should
have settled the matter past all doubt ; but though the 3rd
of November was a sweet day, and in appearance exactly
suited to my wishes, yet not a martin was to be seen, and
so I was forced, reluctantly, to give up the pursuit.
I have only to add, that were the bushes, which cover
some acres, and are not my own property, to be grubbed
and carefully examined, probably those late broods, and
perhaps the whole aggregate bodj of the house martins of
1 Upon this passage the Rev. Mr. Herbert remarks that the author
appears to have a strong bias to believe that martins, &c., remain dor-
mant in this country, having " taken up a very erroneous notion of the
difficulty of the passage," and "drawing from circumstances probabilities
which are not justified by his statements." It is scarcely necessary at
the present day, either to follow or support Mr. Herbert in his argu-
ments against hybernation, and in favour of migration, since all well-
informed naturalists are now agreed that the theory advanced by Gilbert
White is untenable. Were any proof of migration required, much
stronger evidence than that adduced by Mr. Herbert could readily be
supplied. — ED.
288 NATURAL HISTORY
this district, might be found there, in different secret doi
mitories; and that, so far from withdrawing into warmer
climes, it would appear that they never depart 300 yards
from the village.
LETTER LYI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
HEY who write on natural history cannot too
frequently advert to instinct, that wonderful
limited faculty, which, in some instances,
raises the brute creation as it were above
reason, and in others leaves them so far below
it. Philosophers have defined instinct to be that secret
influence by which every species is impelled naturally to
pursue, at all times, the same way or track, without any
teaching or example ; whereas reason, without instruction,
would often vary and do that by many methods which in-
stinct effects by one alone. Now this maxim must be taken
in a qualified sense ; for there are instances in which instinct
does vary and conform to the circumstances of place and
convenience.
It has been remarked that every species of bird has a
mode of nidification peculiar to itself; so that a schoolboy
would at once pronounce on the sort of nest before him.
This is the case among fields and woods and wilds ; but in
the villages round London, where mosses and gossamer, and
cotton from vegetables, are hardly to be found, the nest of
the chaffinch has not that elegant, finished appearance, nor
is it so beautifully studded with lichens, as in a more rural
district ; and the wren is obliged to construct its house
with straws and dry grasses, which do not give it that
rotundity and compactness so remarkable in the edifices of
that little architect.1 Again, the regular nest of the house
1 May not the use of bright and fresh materials in the country, and
OF SELBOENE. 289
martin is hemispheric ; but where a rafter, or a joist, or a
cornice may happen to stand in the way, the nest is so con-
trived as to conform to the obstruction, and becomes flat or
oval or compressed.
In the following instances instinct is perfectly uniform
and consistent. There are three creatures, the squirrel, the
field-mouse, and the bird called the nuthatch (Sitta europcea) ,*
which live much on hazel-nuts; and yet they open them
each in a different way. The first, after rasping off the
small end, splits the shell in two with his long fore teeth,
as a man does with his knife ; the second nibbles a hole
with his teeth, so regular as if drilled with a wimble, and
yet so small that one would wonder how the kernel can be
extracted through it ; while the last picks an irregular
ragged hole with its bill : but as this artist has no paws to
hold the nut firm while he pierces it, like an adroit work-
man, he fixes it, as it were, in a vice, in some cleft of a tree,
or in some crevice ; when, standing over it, he perforates
the stubborn shell. We have often placed nuts in the chink
of a gate-post where nuthatches have been known to haunt,
and have always found that those birds have readily pene-
trated them. While at work they make a rapping noise
that may be heard at a considerable distance.
You that understand both the theory and practical part
of music may best inform us why harmony or melody
should so strangely affect some men, aa it were by recollec-
tion, for days after a concert is over. What I mean the
following passage will most readily explain :
" Prsehabebat porro vocibus humanis instrumentisque
harmonicis musicam illam avium : non quod alia quoque non
dclectaretur; sed quod ex musica humana relinquerctur in
of those of a more sombre description in the neighbourhood of London
be intended to answer the same purpose, namely, to render the nests
secure from observation ? — ED
1 The Scandinavian nuthatch, described by Linnaeus (" Syst. Nat." i.
p. 177,) as Sitta europcea, differs from that found in Great Britain, and
the latter, therefore, should be distinguished as Sitta cccsia, that being
the oldest name applied by Meyer (** Taschenb. Deutsch. Vogel," i. p.
128) to the »aip<e bird as observed in Germany. — ED.
U
290 NATURAL HISTORY
animo continens qugedam, attentionemque et somnum con
turbans, agitatio ; dum ascensus, exscensus, tenores, ac mu-
tationes illze sonorum et consonantiarum euntque redeuntque
per phantasiam : — cum nihil tale relinqui possit ex modula-
tionibus avium, quae, quod non sunt perinde a nobis inrita-
biles, non possunt perinde internam facultatem commovere."
— GASSENDUS in Vita Peireskii.
This curious quotation strikes me much by so well repre-
senting my own case, and describing what I have so often
felt, but never could so well express. When I hear fine
music I am haunted with passages therefrom night and day ;
and especially at first waking, which, by their importunity,
give me more uneasiness than pleasure : elegant lessons still
tease my imagination, and recur irresistibly to my recollec-
tion at seasons, and even when I am desirous of thinking of
more serious matters.
LETTER LVII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
BARE, and I think a new, little bird fre-
quents my garden, which I have great reason
to think is the pettychaps : it is common in
some parts of the kingdom ; and I have re-
ceived formerly several dead specimens from
Gibraltar. This bird much resembles the white-throat, but
has a more white or rather silvery breast and belly; is rest-
less and active, like the willow- wrens, and hops from bough
to bough, examining every part for food ; it also runs up
the stems of the crown-imperials, and, putting its head into
the bells of those flowers, sips the liquor which stands in the
nectarium of each petal. Sometimes it feeds on the ground
like the hedge sparrow, by hopping about on the grass-plots
and mown walks.1
1 This could not be the pettyehaps, or garden warbler, as Gilbert
OF SELBORNE. 291
One of my neighbours, an intelligent and observing man,
informs me that, in the beginning of May, and about ten
minutes before eight o'clock in the evening, he discovered a
great cluster of house-swallows, thirty at least, he supposes,
perching on a willow that hung over the verge of James
Knight's upper pond. His attention was first drawn by
the twittering of these birds, which sat motionless in a row
on the bough, with their heads all one way, and, by their
weight, pressing down the twig so that it nearly touched the
water. In this situation he watched them till he could see
no longer. Repeated accounts of this sort, spring and fall,
induce us greatly to suspect that house swallows have some
-strong attachment to water, independent of the matter of
food ; and, though they may not retire into that element,
yet they may conceal themselves in the banks of pools and
rivers during the uncomfortable months of winter.1
One of the keepers of Wolmer Forest sent me a> pere-
grine falcon, which he shot on the verge of that district as
it was devouring a wood-pigeon. The Falco peregrinus, or
liaggard falcon, is a noble species of hawk seldom seen in
the southern counties.2 In winter, 1767, one was killed in
the neighbouring parish of Faringdon, and sent by me to
Mr. Pennant into North Wales.3 Since that time I have
met with none till now. The specimen mentioned above
was in fine preservation, and not injured by the shot; it
White supposed. His description of its appearance and habits points to
the lesser whitethroat. — ED.
1 This attachment of swallows to the neighbourhood of water at
roosting-time may be easily accounted for by the circumstance that the
willow brandies not only afford them most convenient perches, but
enable the birds to crowd close together and so secure greater warmth
to individuals than they could possibly enjoy if each roosted upon a
separate twig in trees or shrubs of different growth. The noisy flut-
tering which ensues in a struggle for inside places must frequently have
attracted the notice of attentive observers. — ED.
2 The peregrine breeds in the sea-cM's of Sussex, Dorset, and the
Isle of Wight, and doubtless did so in the days of Gilbert White, al-
though the fact was unknown to him. — ED.
8 See my tenth and eleventh [and twelfth] Letters to that gentleman.
— G. W.
292
NATURAL HISTORY
measured forty- two inches from wing to wing, and twenty-one
from beak to tail, and weighed two pounds and a half standing
weight. This species is very robust, and wonderfully formed
for rapine : its breast was plump and muscular \ its thighs
long, thick, and brawny ; and its legs remarkably short and
well set : the feet were armed with most formidable, sharp,
long talons : the eyelids and cere of the bill were yellow,
but the irides of the eyes dusky ; the beak was thick and
hooked, and of a dark colour, and had a jagged process near
PEREGRINE FALCON.
the end of the upper mandible on each side: its tail, or
train, was short in proportion to the bulk of its body : yet
the wings, when closed, did not extend to the end of the
train. From its large and fair proportions it might be sup-
posed to have been a female ; but I was not permitted to
cut open the specimen. For one of the birds of prey, which
are usually lean, this was in high case : in its craw were
many barleycorns, which probably came from the crop of
the wood pigeon, on which it was feeding when shot : for
voracious birds do not eat grain ; but, when devouring their
quarry, with undistinguishing vehemence swallow bones
OF SELBORNE. 293
and feathers, and all matters, indiscriminately. This falcon
was probably driven from the mountains of North Wales or
Scotland, where they are known to breed, by rigorous
weather and deep snows that had lately fallen.1
LETTER LVIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
near neighbour, a young gentleman in the
service of the East India Company, has
brought home a dog and a bitch of the
Chinese breed from Canton ; such as are
fattened in that country for the purpose of
being eaten : they are about the size of a moderate spaniel ;
of a pale yellow colour, with coarse bristling hairs on their
b^cks ; sharp upright cars, and peaked heads, which give
them a very fox-like appearance. Their hind legs are un-
usually straight, without any bend at the hock or ham, to
such a degree as to give them an awkward gait when they
trot. When they are in motion their tails are curved high
over their backs like those of some hounds, and have a bare
place each on the outside, from the tip midway, that does
not seem to be matter of accident, but somewhat singular.
Their eyes are jet black, small, and piercing : the insides of
their lips and mouths of the same colour, and their tongues
blue. The bitch has a dew-claw on each hind-leg ; the dog
has none. When taken out into a field the bitch showed
some disposition for hunting, and dwelt on the scent of a
covey of partridges till she sprung them, giving her tongue
all the time. The dogs in South America are dumb ; but
these bark much in a short thick manner, like foxes ; and
1 Although it is possible that this bird may have been migrating
from the north, it is not unlikely to have been a wanderer from the
Sussex or Dorsetshire sea-cliffs. See page 291, note 2. — ED.
294 NATURAL HISTORY
have a surly, savage demeanour like their ancestors, which
are not domesticated, but bred up in sties, where they arc
fed for the table with rice-meal and other farinaceous food.
These dogs, having been taken on board as soon as weaned,
could not learn much from their dam ; yet they did not
relish flesh when they came to England. In the islands
of the Pacific Ocean the dogs are bred up on vegetables,
and would not eat flesh when ofl'ered them by our circum-
navigators.
We believe that all dogs, in a state of nature, have sharp,
upright, fox -like ears ; and that hanging ears, which are
esteemed so graceful, are the effect of choice breeding and
cultivation. Thus, in the " Travels of Ysbrandt Ides from
Muscovy to China," the dogs which draw the Tartars on snow
sledges near the river Oby are engraved with prick-ears,
like those from Canton. The Kamtschatdales also train the
same sort of sharp-eared, peaked-nosed dogs to draw their
sledges ; as may be seen in an elegant print engraved for
Captain Cook's last voyage round the world.
r^ J o
Now we are upon the subject of dogs, it may not be im-
pertinent to add, that spaniels, as all sportsmen know, though
they hunt partridges and pheasants as it were by instinct,
and with much delight and alacrity, yet will hardly touch
their bones when offered as food ; nor will a mongrel dog of
my own, though he is remarkable for finding that sort of
game. But, when we came to offer the bones of partridges
to the two Chinese dogs, they devoured them with much
greediness, and licked the platter clean.
No sporting dogs will flush woodcocks till inured to the
scent and trained to the sport, which they then pursue with
vehemence and transport ; but then they will not touch their
bones, but turn from them with abhorrence, even when they
are hungry.
Now that dogs should not be fond of the bones of such
birds as they are not disposed to hunt is no wonder; but
why they reject and do not care to eat their natural game is
not so easily accounted for, since the end of hunting seems
to be, that the chase pursued should be eaten. Dogs again
will not devour the more rancid water-fowls, nor indeed the
OF SELBOENE. 295
bones of any wild-fowls ; nor will they touch the foetid bodies
of birds that feed on offal and garbage : and indeed there
may be somewhat of providential instinct in this circumstance
of dislike ; for vultures,1 and kites, and ravens, and crows,
&c. were intended to be messmates with dogs2 over their
carrion ; and seem to be appointed by Nature as fellow-
scavengers to remove all cadaverous nuisances from the face
of the earth.
LETTER LIX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON..
HE fossil wood buried in the bogs of Wolmer
Forest is not yet all exhausted ; for the peat
cutters now and then stumble upon a log.3
I have just seen a piece which was sent by a
labourer of Oakhanger to a carpenter of this
village -, this was the b-ut-end of a small oak, about five feet
long, and about five inches in diameter. It had apparently
been severed from the ground by an axe, was very ponderous,
and as black as ebony. Upon asking the carpenter for what
purpose he had procured it, he told me that it was to be
sent to his brother, a joiner at Farnham, who was to make
use of it in cabinet work, by inlaying it along with whiter
woods.
Those that are much abroad on evenings after it is dark,
in spring and summer, frequently hear a nocturnal bird
passing by on the wing, and repeating often a short quick
note. This bird I have remarked myself, but never could
1 Hasselquist, in his " Travels to the Levant," observes that the dogs
and vultures at Grand Cairo maintain such a friendly intercourse as to
bring up their young together in the same place. — G. W.
2 The Chinese word for a dog to a European ear sounds like
quihloh.—G. W.
3 See Letter VI. to Pennant, p. 19, note 1. — ED.
296 NATURAL HISTORY
make out till lately. I am assured now that it is the stone-
curlew (Charadrius oedicncmus) .* Some of them pass over
or near my house almost every evening after it is dark, from
the uplands of the hill and North Field, away down towards
Dorton, where, among the streams and meadows, they find
a greater plenty of food. Birds that fly by night are obliged
to be noisy; their notes often repeated become signals or
watch- words to keep them together, that they may not stray
or lose each the other in the dark.
The evening proceedings and manoeuvres of the rooks are
curious and amusing in the autumn. Just before dusk they
return in long strings from the foraging of the day, and
rendezvous by thousands over Selborne Down, where they
wheel round in the air, and sport and dive in a playful
manner, all the while exerting their voices, and making a
loud cawing, which,, being blended and softened by the
distance that we at the village are below them, becomes a
confused noise or chiding ; or rather a pleasing murmur,
very engaging to the imagination, and not unlike the cry of
a pack of hounds in hollow, echoing woods, or the rushing
of the wind in tall trees, or the tumbling of the tide upon a
pebbly shore. When this ceremony is over, with the last
gleam of day, they retire for the night to the deep beecnfn
woods of Tisted and Ropley. We remember a little girl
who, as she was going to bed, used to remark on such an
occurrence, in the true spirit of physico-theology, that the
rooks were saying their prayers ; and yet this child was much
too young to be aware that the Scriptures have said of the
Deity — that <f he feedeth the ravens who call upon Him."
(Edicnemus crepitans, Temminck. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 297
LETTER LX.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
reading Dr. Huxham's " Observationes de
Acre," &c. written at Plymouth, I find by
those curious and accurate remarks, which con-
tain an account of the weather from the year
1727 to the year 1748 inclusive, that though
there is frequent rain in that district of Devonshire, yet the
quantity falling is not great : and that some years it has
been very small; for in 1731 the rain measured only 17*266
inches; and in 1741, 20'354 ; and again in 1743, only
20*908. Places near the sea have frequent scuds, that keep
the atmosphere moist, yet do not reach far up into . the
country ; making thus the maritime situations appear wet,
when the rain is not considerable. In the wettest years at
Plymouth the doctor measured only once 36 ; and again
once, viz. 1734, 37'114: a quantity of rain that has twice
been exceeded at Selborne in the short period of my obser-
vations. Dr. Huxham remarks, that frequent small rains
keep the air moist; while heavy ones render it more dry,
by beating down the vapours. He is also of opinion that
the dingy, smoky appearance in the sky, in very dry seasons,
arises from the want of moisture sufficient to let the light
through, and render the atmosphere transparent; because
he had observed several bodies more diaphanous when wet
than dry ; and did never recollect that the air had that look
in rainy seasons.
My friend, who lives just beyond the top of the down,
brought his three swivel guns to try them in my outlet, with
their muzzles towards the Hanger, supposing that the report
would have had a great effect ; but the experiment did not
answer his expectation. He then removed them to the
Alcove on the Hanger; when the sound, rushing along the
Lythe and Comb Wood, was very grand ; but it was at the
Hermitage that the echoes and repercussions delighted the
298 NATURAL HISTORY
hearers ; not only filling the Lythe with the roar, as if all the
beeches were tearing up by the roots ; but turning to the
left, they pervaded the vale above Comb Wood Ponds ; and
after a pause seemed to take up the crash again, and to
extend round Harteley, Hangers, and to die away at last
among the coppices and coverts of Ward-le-ham. It has
been remarked before that this district is an Anathoth, a
place of responses or echoes, and therefore proper for such
experiments : we may farther add, that the pauses in echoes,
when they cease and yet are taken up again, like the pauses
in music, surprise the hearers, and have a fine effect on the
imagination.
The gentleman above mentioned has just fixed a baro-
meter in his parlour at Newton Valence. The tube was
first filled here (at Selborne) twice with care, when the
mercury agreed and stood exactly with my own ; but being
filled again twice at Newton, the mercury stood, on account
of the great elevation of that house, three-tenths of an inch
lower than the barometers at this village, and so continues
to do, be the weight of the atmosphere what it may. The
plate of the barometer at Newton is figured as low as 27° ;
because in stormy weather the mercury there will some-
times descend below 28°. We have supposed Newton
House to stand 200 feet higher than this house : but if the
rule holds good, which says that mercury in a barometer
sinks one-tenth of an inch for every 100 feet elevation, then
the Newton barometer, by standing three tenths lower than
that of Selborne, proves that Newton House must be 300 feet
higher than that in which I am writing, instead of 200.
It may not be impertinent to add, that the barometers at
Selborne stand three-tenths of an inch lower than the
barometers of South Lambeth : whence we may conclude
that the former place is about 300 feet higher than the latter;
and with good reason, because the streams that rise with us
run into the Thames at Weybridge, and so to London. Of
course, therefore, there must be lower ground all the way
from Selborne to South Lambeth; the distance between
which, all the windings and indentings of the streams con-
sidered, cannot be less than 100 miles.
OF tiELBORNE. 299
LETTER LXL
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
INGE the weather of a district is undoubtedly
part of its natural history, I shall make no
further apology for the four following letters,
which will contain many particulars con-
cerning some of the great frosts and a few
respecting some very hot summers, that have distinguished
themselves from the rest during the course of my obser-
vations.
As the frost in January, 1768., was, for the small time it
lasted, the most severe that we had then known for many years,
and was remarkably injurious to evergreens, some account
of its rigour, and reason of its ravages, may be useful, and
not unacceptable to persons that delight in planting and
ornamenting; and may particularly become a work that
professes never to lose sight of utility.
For the last two or three days of the former year there
were considerable falls of snow, which lay deep and uniform
on the ground, without any drifting, wrapping up the more
humble vegetation in perfect security. From the first day
to the fifth of the new year more snow succeeded; but from
that day the air became entirely clear ; and the heat of the
sun about noon had a considerable influence in sheltered
situations.
It was in such an aspect that the snow on the author's
evergreens was melted every day, and frozen intensely
every night; so that the laurustines, bays, laurels, and
arbutuses looked, in three or four days, as if they had been
burned in the fire; while a neighbour's plantation of the
same kind, in a high cold situation, where the snow was
never melted at all, remained uninjured.
From hence I would infer, that it is the repeated melting
and freezing of the snow that is so fatal to vegetation,
3.00 NATURAL HISTORY
rather than the severity of the cold. Therefore it highly
behoves every planter, who wishes to escape the cruel morti-
fication of losing in a few days the labour and hopes of
years, to bestir himself on such emergencies ; and, if his
plantations are small, to avail himself of mats, cloths, peaso-
haum, straw, reeds, or any such covering for a short time ;
or if his shrubberies are extensive, to see that his people
go about with prongs and forks, and carefully dislodge the
snow from the boughs: since the naked foliage will shift
much better for itself, than where the snow is partly melted
and frozen again.
It may perhaps appear at first like a paradox ; but doubt-
less the more tender trees and shrubs should never be
planted in hot aspects ; not only for the reason assigned
above, but also, because thus circumstanced, they are dis-
posed to shoot earlier in the spring, and to grow on later in
the autumn than they would otherwise do, and so are
sufferers by lagging or early frosts. For this reason also
plants from Siberia will hardly endure our climate : because,
on the very first advances of spring, they shoot away, and
so are cut off by the severe nights of March or April.
Dr. Fothcrgill and others have experienced the same
inconvenience with respect to the more tender shrubs from
North America ; which they therefore plant under north
walls. There should also perhaps be a wall to the east to
defend them from the piercing blasts from that quarter.
This observation might without any impropriety be car-
ried into animal life ; for discerning bee-masters now find
that their hives should not in the winter be exposed to the
hot sun, because such unseasonable warmth awakens the
inhabitants too early from their slumbers ; and, by putting
their juices into motion too soon, subjects them afterwards
to inconveniences when rigorous weather returns.
The coincidents attending this short but intense frost
were, that the horses fell sick with an epidemic distemper,
which injured the winds of many, and killed some; that
colds and coughs were getieral among the human species ;
that it froze under people's beds for several nights; that
meat was so hard frozen that it could not be spitted, and
OF SELBORNE. 301
could not be secured but in cellars ; that several redwings
and thrushes were killed by the frost ; and that the largo
titmouse continued to pull straws lengthwise from the eaves
of thatched houses and barns in a most adroit manner, for
a purpose that has been explained already.1
On the 3rd of January, Benjamin Martin's thermometer
within doors, in a close parlour where there was no fire, fell
in the night to 20°, and on the 4th to 18°, and on the 7th
to 17^-°, a degree of cold which the owner never since saw
in the same situation ; and he regrets much that he was not
able at that juncture to attend his instrument abroad. All
this time the wind continued north and north-east; and
yet on the 8th roost-cocks, which had been silent, began to
sound their clarions, and crows to clamour, as prognostic
of milder weather; and, moreover, moles began to heave
and work, and a manifest thaw took place. From the latter
circumstance we may conclude that thaws often originate
under ground from warm vapours which arise, else how
should subterraneous animals receive such early intimations
of their approach ? Moreover, we have often observed that
cold seems to descend from above ; for, when a thermometer
hangs abroad in a frosty night, the intervention of a cloud
shall immediately raise the mercury 10° ; and a clear sky
shall again compel it to descend to its former gage.
And here it may be proper to observe, on what has been
said above, that though frosts advance to their utmost
severity by somewhat of a regular gradation, yet thaws do
not usually come on by as regular a declension of cold, but
often take place immediately from intense freezing, as men
in sickness often mend at once from a paroxysm.
To the great credit of Portugal laurels and American
jumpers, be it remembered that they remained untouched
amidst the general havoc ; hence men should learn to orna-
ment chiefly with such trees as are able to withstand acci-
dental severities, and not subject themselves to the vexation
of a k/ss which may befall them once perhaps in ten years,
yet may hardly be recovered through the whole course of
their lives.
1 See Letter XLI. to Pennant [p. 127].— G. W.
302 NATURAL HISTORY
As it appeared afterwards the ilexes were mucli injured,
the cypresses were half destroyed, the arbutuses lingered
on, but never recovered; and the bays, laurustines, and
laurels were killed to the ground, and the very wild hollies,
in hot aspects, were so much affected that they cast all
their leaves.
By the 14th of January the snow was entirely gone ; the
turnips emerged not damaged at all, save in sunny places,
the wheat looked delicately, and the garden plants were
well preserved ; for snow is the most kindly mantle that
infant vegetation can be wrapped in : were it not for that
friendly meteor, no vegetable life could exist at all in
northerly regions. Yet in Sweden the earth in April is
not divested of snow for more than a fortnight before the
face of the country is covered with flowers.
LETTER LXIL
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
HERE were some circumstances attending
the remarkable frost in January, 1776, so
singular and striking, that a short detail of
them may not be unacceptable.
The most certain way to be exact will be
to copy the passages from my journal, which were taken
from time to time as things occurred. But it may be pro-
per previously to remark, that the first week in January
was uncommonly wet, and drowned with vast rains from
every quarter; from whence may be inferred, as there is
great reason to believe is the case, that intense frosts sel-
dom take place till the earth is perfectly glutted and chilled
with water,1 and hence dry autumns are seldom followed by
rigorous winters.
1 The autumn preceding January, 1768, was very wet, and particu-
larly the month of September, during which there fell at Lyndon in the
OF SELBORNE. 303
January 7th. — Snow driving all the day, which was fol-
lowed by frost, sleet, and some snow, till the 12th, when a
prodigious mass overwhelmed all the works of men, drifting
over the tops of the gates and filling the hollow lanes.
On the 14th the writer was obliged to be much abroad, and
thinks he never before or since has encountered such rugged
Siberian weather. Many of the narrow roads were now filled
above the tops of the hedges, through which the snow was
driven into most romantic and grotesque shapes, so striking
to the imagination as not to be seen without wonder and
pleasure. The poultry dared not to stir out of their roosting-
places — for cocks and hens are so dazzled and confounded
by the glare of snow that they would soon perish without
assistance. The hares also lay sullenly in their seats, and
would not move till compelled by hunger, being conscious,
poor animals, that the drifts and heaps treacherously betray
their footsteps, and prove fatal to numbers of them.
From the 14th the snow continued to increase, and began
to stop the road waggons and coaches, which could no
longer keep on their regular stages, and especially on the
western roads, where the fall appears to have been deeper
than in the south. The company at Bath, that wanted to
attend the Queen's birthday, were strangely incommoded ;
many carriages of persons who got in their way to town,
from Bath, as far as Marlborough, after strange embarrass-
ments, here met with a ne plus ultra. The ladies fretted,
and offered large rewards to labourers if they would shovel
them a track to London, but the relentless heaps of snow
were too bulky to be removed; and so the 18th passed over,
leaving the company in very uncomfortable circumstances
at the Castle and other inns.
On the 20th the sun shone out for the first time since the
frost began — a circumstance that has been remarked before
much in favour of vegetation. All this time the cold was
not very intense, for the thermometer stood at 29°, 28°, 25°,
county of Rutland, six inches and a half of rain. And the terrible long
frost in 1739-40 set in after a rainy season, and when the springs were
very high.— G, W.
80 J. NATURAL HISTORY
and thereabouts; but on the 21st it descended to 20°. The
birds now began to be in a very pitiable and starving con-
dition. Tamed by the season, skylarks settled in the streets
of towns, because they saw the ground was bare; rooks
frequented dunghills close to houses,, and crows watched
horses as they passed, and greedily devoured what dropped
from them; hares now came into men's gardens, and scraping
away the snow, devoured such plants as they could find.
On the 22nd the author had occasion to go to London,
through a sort of Laplandian scene, very wild and grotesque
indeed. But the metropolis itself exhibited a still more
singular appearance than the country ; for being imbedded
deep in snow, the pavement of the streets could not be
touched by the wheels or the horses' feet, so that the
carriages ran about without the least noise. Such an ex-
emption from din and clatter was strange, but not pleasant ;
it seemed to convey an uncomfortable idea of desolation :
ipsa silentia terrer.t."
On the 27th much snow fell all day, and in the evening
the frost became very intense. At South Lambeth, for the
four following nights, the thermometer fell to 11°, 7°, 6°, 6°;
and at Selborne to 7°, 6°, 10°; and on the 31st of January,
just before sunrise, with rime on the trees and on the tubes
of the glass, the quicksilver sunk exactly to zero, being
32° below the freezing point; but by eleven in the morning,
though in the shade, it sprung up to 16 f° l — a most unusual
degree of cold this for the south of England ! During these
four nights the cold was so penetrating that it occasioned
ice in warm chambers and under beds ; and in the day the
wind was so keen that persons of robust constitution could
scarcely endure to face it. The Thames was at once so
frozen over, both above and below bridge that crowds ran
1 At Selborne the cold was greater than at any other place that the
author could hear of with certainty ; though some reported at the time
that at a village in Kent the thermometer fell 2° below zero, viz., 34°
below the freezing point.
The thermometer used at Selborne was graduated by Benjamin
Martin.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 305
about on the ice. The streets were now strangely incum-
bered with snow, which crumbled and trod dusty, and,
turning gray, resembled bay-salt : what had fallen on the
roofs was so perfectly dry, that, from first to last, it lay
twenty-six days on the houses in the city — a longer time
than had been remembered by the oldest housekeepers
living. According to all appearances we might now have
expected the continuance of this rigorous weather for weeks
to come, since every night increased in severity; but behold,
without any apparent cause, on the 1st of February a thaw
took place, and some rain followed before night — making
good the observation above, that frosts often go off as it
were at once, without any gradual declension of cold. On the
2nd of February the thaw persisted, and on the 3rd swarms
of little insects were frisking' and sporting in a court-yard at
South Lambeth, as if they had felt no frost. Why the
juices in the small bodies and smaller limbs of such minute
beings are not frozen, is a matter of curious inquiry.
Severe frosts seems to be partial, or to run in currents ;
for at the same juncture, as the author was informed by
accurate correspondents, at Lyndon, in the county of
Rutland, the thermometer stood at 19° : at Blackburn, in
Lancashire, at 19° : and at Manchester at 21°, 20°, and 18°.
Thus does some unknown circumstance strangely overbal-
ance latitude, and render the cold sometimes much greater
in the southern than in the northern parts of this kingdom.
The consequences of this severity were, that in Hamp-
shire, at the melting of the snow, the wheat looked well,
and the turnips came forth little injured. The laurels and
laurustines were somewhat damaged, but only in hot aspects.
No evergreens were quite destroyed; and not half the
damage sustained that befell in January, 1768. Those
laurels that were a little scorched on the south sides were
perfectly untouched on their north sides. The care taken
to shake the snow day by day from the branches seemed
greatly to avail the author's evergreens. A neighbour's
laurel-hedge, in a high situation, and facing to the north,
was perfectly green and vigorous ; and the Portugal laurels
remained unhurt.
306 NATURAL HISTORY
As to the birds, the thrushes and blackbirds were mostly
destroyed ; and the partridges, by the weather and poachers,
were so thinned that few remained to breed the following
year.
LETTER LXIII.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
S the frost in December, 1784, was very extra-
ordinary, you, I trust, will not be displeased
to hear the particulars ; and especially when
I promise to say no more about the severities
of winter after I have finished this letter.
The first week in December was very wet, with the
barometer very low. On the 7th, with the barometer at
28° — five tenths, came on a vast snow, which continued all
that day and the next, and most part of the following night;
so that by the morning of the 9th the works of men were
quite overwhelmed, the lanes filled so as to be impassable,
and the ground covered twelve or fifteen inches without any
drifting. In the evening of the 9th the air began to be so
very sharp that we thought it would be curious to attend to
the motions of a thermometer : we therefore hung out two ;
one made by Martin and one by Dollond, which soon began
to show us what we were to expect ; for, by ten o'clock,,
they fell to 21°, and at eleven to 4°, when we went to bed.
On the 10th, in the morning, the quicksilver of Dollond' s
glass was down to half a degree below zero ; and that of
Martin's, which was absurdly graduated only to four degrees
above zero, sunk quite into the brass guard of the ball; so
that when the weather became most interesting, this was
useless. On the 10th, at eleven at night, though the air
was perfectly still, Dollond' s glass went down to one degree
below zero ! This strange severity of the weather made
me very desirous to know what degree of cold there might
be in such an exalted and near situation as Newton. We
OF SELBOENE. 307
had, therefore, on the morning of the 10th, written to
Mr. } and entreated him to hang out his thermometer,
made by Adams ; and to pay some attention to it morning
and evening ; expecting wonderful phenomena, in so ele-
vated a region, at two hundred feet or more above my
house. But, behold ! on the 10th, at eleven at night, it
was down only to 17°, and the next morning at 22°, when
mine was at 10° ! We were so disturbed at this un-
expected reverse of comparative local cold, that we sent
one of my glasses up, thinking that of Mr. must,
somehow, be wrongly constructed. But, when the instru-
ments came to be confronted, they went exactly together ;
so that, for one night at least, the cold at Newton was 18°
less than at Selborne ; and, through the whole frost, 10° or
12°; and, indeed, when we came to observe consequences,
we could readily credit this; for all my laurustines, bays,
ilexes, arbutuses, cypresses, and even my Portugal laurels1,
and (which occasions more regret) my fine sloping laurel
hedge, were scorched up ; while, at Newton, the same trees
have not lost a leaf !
We had steady frost on to the 25th, when the thermo-
meter in the morning was down to 10° with us, and at
Newton only to 21°. Strong frost continued till the 31st,
when some tendency to thaw was observed ; and, by
January the 3rd, 1785, the thaw was confirmed, and some
rain fell.
A circumstance that I must not omit, because it was new
to us, is, that on Friday, December the 10th, being bright
sunshine, the air was full of icy spiculcp,, floating in all
directions, like atoms in a sunbeam let into a dark room.
We thought them at first particles of the rime falling from
my tall hedges ; but were soon convinced to the contrary, by
making our observations in open places where no rime could
1 Mr. Miller, in his Gardener's Dictionary, says positively that the
Portugal laurels remained untouched in the remarkable frost of 1739-40.
So that either that accurate observer was much mistaken, or else the
frost of December, 1784, was much more severe and destructive than
that in the year above mentioned. — G. W.
308 NATURAL HISTORY
reach us. Were they watery particles of the air frozen as
they floated ; or were they evaporations from the snow
frozen as they mounted ?
We were much obliged to the thermometers for the early
information they gave us ; and hurried our apples, pears,
onions, potatoes, &c. into the cellar, and warm closets ;
while those who had not, or neglected, such warnings, lost
all their stores of roots and fruits, and had their very bread
and cheese frozen.
I must not omit to tell you that, during those two
Siberian days, my parlour cat was so electric, that had a
person stroked her, and been properly insulated, the shock
might have been given to a whole circle of people.
I forgot to mention before, that, during the two severe
days, two men, who were tracing hares in the snow, had
their feet frozen ; and two men, who were much better
employed, had their fingers so affected by the frost, while
they were thrashing in a barn, that a mortification followed,
from which they did not recover for many weeks.
This frost killed all the furze and most of the ivy, and in
many places stripped the hollies of all their leaves. It
came at a very early time of the year, before old Novem-
ber ended ; and yet may be allowed from its effects to have
exceeded any since 1739-40.
LETTER LXIY.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
S the effects of heat are seldom very remark-
able in the northerly climate of England,
where the summers are often so defective in
warmth and sunshine as not to ripen the
fruits of the earth so well as might be
wished, I shall be more concise in my account of the
severity of a summer season, and so make a little amends
OF SELBORNE. 309
for the prolix account of the degrees of cold, and the in-
conveniences that we suffered from some late rigorous
winters.
The summers of 1781 and 1783 were unusually hot and
dry; to them therefore I shall turn back in my journals,
without recurring to any more distant period. In the
former of these years my peach and nectarine trees suffered
so much from the heat that the rind on the bodies was
scalded and came off; since which the trees have been in a
decaying state. This may prove a hint to assiduous
gardeners to fence and shelter their wall-trees with mats or
boards, as they may easily do, because such annoyance is
seldom of long continuance. During that summer also, I
observed that my apples were coddled, as it were, on the
trees ; so that they had no quickness of flavour, and would
not keep in the winter. This circumstance put me in mind
of what I have heard travellers assert, that they never ate a
good apple or apricot in the south of Europe, where the
heats were so great as to render the juices vapid and
insipid.
The great pests of a garden are wasps, which destroy all
the finer fruits just as they are coming into perfection.
In 1781 we had none: in 1783 there were myriads, which
would have devoured all the produce of my garden, had wo
not set the boys to take the nests, and caught thousands
with hazel twigs tipped with birdlime : we have since
employed the boys to take and destroy the large breeding
wasps in the spring. Such expedients have a great effect
on these marauders, and will keep them under. Though
wasps do not abound but in hot summers, yet they do not
prevail in every hot summer, as I have instanced in the two
years above mentioned.
In the sultry season of 1783 honeydews were so frequent
as to deface and destroy the beauties of my garden. My
honeysuckles, which were one week the most sweet and
lovely objects that the eye could behold, became the next
the most loathsome; being enveloped in a viscous substance,
and loaded with black aphides, or smother- flies. The
occasion of this clammy appearance seeins to be this, that
310 NATURAL HISTORY
in hot weather the effluvia of flowers in fields and meadows
and gardens are drawn up in the day by a brisk evaporation,
and then in the night fall down again with the dews, in
which they are entangled; that the air is strongly scented,
and therefore impregnated with the particles of flowers in
summer weather, our senses will inform us ; and that this
clammy sweet substance is of the vegetable kind we may
learn from bees, to whom it is very grateful : and we may
be assured that it falls in the night, because it is always first
seen in warm still mornings.1
On chalky and sandy soils, and in the hot villages about
London, the thermometer has been often observed to mount
as high as 83° or 84° ; but with us, in this hilly and woody
district, I have hardly ever seen it exceed 80°, nor does it
often arrive at that pitch. The reason, I conclude, is, that
our dense clayey soil, so much shaded by trees, is not so
easily heated through as those abovementioned : and, be-
sides, our mountains cause currents of air and breezes ; and
the vast effluvia from our woodlands temper and moderate
our heats.
LETTER LXY.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES HARRINGTON.
HE summer of the year 1783 was an amazing
and portentous one, and full of horrible
phenomena; for, besides the alarming me-
teors and tremendous thunder-storms that
affrighted and distressed the different coun-
ties of this kingdom, the peculiar hazo or smoky fog that
1 The conjecture here hazarded concerning the origin of honeydew
is erroneous. Mr. Curtis has shown (Trans. Linn. Soc., vol. vi.) that
this substance is the excrement of the Aphides. In order to convince
a friend who was sceptical as to this fact, Mr. Rennie placed a sheet of
writing paper under a branch where some Aphides were feeding, and
OF SELBOENE. 311
prevailed for many weeks in this island, and in every part
of Europe, and even beyond its limits, was a most extra-
ordinary appearance, unlike any thing known within the
memory of man. By my journal I find that ,1 had noticed
this strange occurrence from June 23 to July 20 inclusive,
during which period the wind varied to every quarter
without making any alteration in the air. The sun, at
noon, looked as blank as a clouded moon, and shed a rust-
coloured ferruginous light on the ground, and floors of
rooms ; but was particularly lurid and blood-coloured at
rising and setting. All the time the heat was so intense
that butchers' meat could hardly be eaten on the day after
it was killed ; and the flies swarmed so in the lanes and
hedges that they rendered the horses half frantic, and riding
irksome. The country people began to look with a super-
stitious awe, at the red, louring aspect of the sun; and
indeed there was reason for the most enlightened person to
be apprehensive; for, all the while, Calabria and part of
the isle of Sicily were torn and convulsed with earthquakes;
and about that juncture a volcano sprung out of the sea on
the coast of Norway. On this occasion Milton's noble
simile of the sun, in his first book of Paradise Lost, fre-
quently occurred to my mind ; and it is indeed particularly
applicable, because, towards the end, it alludes to a super-
stitious kind of dread, with which the minds of men are
always impressed by such strange and unusual phenomena.
As when the sun, new risen,
Looks through the horizontal misty air
Shorn of his beams ; or from behind the moon,
In dim eclipse disastrous twilight sheds
On half the nations, and with fear of change
Perplexes monarchs."
over the leaves below them, which he previously cleaned from honeydew.
The result, as he anticipated, was, that the paper was soon covered with
honeydew, while the leaves below it were free. — Ep.
312 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER LXVI.
TO THE HONOURABLE DAINES BARRINGTON.
B are very seldom annoyed with thunder-
storms ; and it is no less remarkable than
true, that those which arise in the south have
hardly been known to reach this village ; for
before they get over us, they take a direction
to the east or to the west, or sometimes divide into two,
and go in part to one of those quarters, and in part to the
other, as was truly the case in the summer of 1783, when
though the country round was continually harassed with
tempests, and often from the south, yet we escaped them all ;
as appears by my journal of that summer.1 The only way
that I can at all account for this fact — for such it is — is that,
on that quarter, between us and the sea, there are continual
mountains, hill behind hill, such as Nore Hill, the Barnet,
Butser Hill, and Portsdown, which somehow divert the
storms, and give them a different direction. High pro-
montories and elevated grounds have always been observed
to attract clouds, and disarm them of their mischievous
contents, which are discharged into the trees and summits
as soon as they come in contact with those turbulent
meteors ; while the humble vales escape, because they are
so far beneath them.
But, when I say I do not remember a thunderstorm
from the south, I do not mean that we never have suffered
from thunderstorms at all; for on June 5th, 1784, the
thermometer in the morning being at 64°, and at noon at
70°, the barometer at 29° — six tenths one-half, and the
wind north, I observed a blue mist, smelling strongly of
sulphur, hanging along our sloping woods, and seeming to
1 To this awful summer of 1783, Cowper also alludes, in his Task,
book ii. p. 41. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 313
indicate that thunder was at hand. I was called in about
two in the afternoon, and so missed seeing the gathering of
the clouds in the north, which they who were abroad
assured me had something uncommon in its appearance.
At about a quarter after two the storm began in the parish
of Hartley, moving slowly from north to south ; and from
thence it came over Norton Farm, and so to Grange Farm,
both in this parish. It began with vast drops of rain,
which were soon succeeded by round hail, and then by
convex pieces of ice, which measured three inches in girth.
Had it been as extensive as it was violent, and of any con-
tinuance (for it was very short) , it must have ravaged all
the neighbourhood. In the parish of Hartley it did some
damage to one farm ; but Norton, which lay in the centre
of the storm, was greatly injured; as was Grange, which
lay next to it. It did but just reach to the middle of the
village, where the hail broke my north windows, and all
garden-lights and hand-glasses, and many of my neigh-
bours' windows. The extent of the storm was about two
miles in length and one in breadth. We were just sitting
down to dinner ; but were soon diverted from our repast
by the clattering of tiles and the jingling of glass. There
fell at the same time prodigious torrents of rain on the
farms above mentioned, which occasioned a flood as violent
as it was sudden ; doing great damage to the meadows and
fallows, by deluging the one and washing away the soil of
the other. The hollow lane towards Alton was so torn and
disordered as not to be passable till mended, rocks being
removed that weighed two hundred- weight. Those that
saw the effect which the great hail had on ponds and pools
say that the dashing of the water made an extraordinary
appearance, the froth and spray standing up in the air three
feet above the surface. The rushing and roaring of the
hail, as it approached, was truly tremendous.
Though the clouds at South Lambeth, near London,
were at that juncture thin and light, and no storm was in
sight, nor within hearing, yet the air was strongly electric ;
for the bells of an electric machine at that place rang
repeatedly, and fierce sparks were discharged.
314 NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE.
When I first took the present work in hand, I proposed
to have added an Annus Historico-Naturalis, or the Natural
History of the Twelve Months of the Year ; which would
have comprised many incidents and occurrences that have
not fallen into my way to be mentioned in my series of
letters ; — but as Mr. Aikin, of Warrington, has lately pub-
lished somewhat of this sort, and as the length of my
correspondence has sufficiently put yonr patience to the
test, I shall here take a respectful leave of you and natural
history together ; and am,
With all due deference and regard,
Your most obliged,
And most humble servant,
GIL. WHITE.
SELBOKNE, June 25, 1787.
OBSEKVATIONS
ON
\TARIOTJS PARTS OF NATURE,
FROM MR. WHITE'S MSS.
VVITII REMARKS, BY MR. MARKWICK AND OTH.F-SS.
OBSERVATIONS ON QUADRUPEDS.
SHEEP.
HE sheep on the downs this winter (1769)
are very ragged, and their coats much torn;
the shepherds say they tear their fleeces
with their own mouths and horns, and that
they are always in that way in mild wet
winters, being teased and tickled with a kind of lice.
After ewes and lambs are shorn, there is great confusion
and bleating, neither the dams nor the young being able to
distinguish one another as before. This embarrassment
seems not so much to arise from the loss of the fleece,
which may occasion an alteration in their appearance, as
from the defect of that notus odor, discriminating each indi-
vidual personally ; which also is confounded by the strong
scent of the pitch and tar wherewith they are newly
marked ; for the brute creation recognise each other more
from the smell than the sight ; and in matters of identity
and diversity appeal much more to their noses than to their
eyes. After sheep have been washed there is the same
confusion, from the reason given above.
RABBITS.
RABBITS make incomparably the finest turf; for they not
only bite closer than larger quadrupeds, but they allow no
bents to rise : hence warrens produce much the most
delicate turf for gardens. Sheep never touch the stalks of
grasses.
318
OBSERVATIONS ON
CAT AND SQUIRRELS.
A BOY has taken three little young squirrels in their nest,
or drey as it is called in these parts. These small creatures
he put under the care of a cat who had lately lost her
kittens, and finds that she nurses and suckles them with the
same assiduity and affection as if they were her own off-
spring. This circumstance corroborates my suspicion, that
the mention of exposed and deserted children being nur-
tured by female beasts of prey who had lost their young,
may not be so improbable an incident as many have sup-
CAT.
posed ; and therefore may be a justification of those authors
who have gravely mentioned what some have deemed to
be a wild and improbable story.
So many people went to see the little squirrels suckled
by a cat, that the foster mother became jealous of her
charge, and in pain for their safety ; and therefore hid them
over the ceiling, where one died. This circumstance shows
her affection for these foundlings, and that she supposes
the squirrels to be her own young. Thus hens, when they
have hatched ducklings, are equally attached to them as if
they were their own chickens.
QUADRUPEDS. 319
HORSE.
AN old hunting mare, which, ran on the common, being
taken very ill, ran down into the village, as it were to
implore the help of men, and died the night following in the
street.
HOUNDS.
THE king's stag hounds came down to Alton, attended
by a huntsman and six yeoman prickers, with horns, to trv
for the stag that has haunted Harteley Wood and its en-
virons for so long a time. Many hundreds of people, horse
and foot, attended the dogs to see the deer unharboured ;
but though the huntsman drew Harteley Wood, and Long
Coppice, and Shrubwood, and Temple Hangers ; and in
their way back Harteley and Ward-le-ham Hangers, yet no
stag could be found.
The royal pack, accustomed to have the deer turned out
before them, never drew the coverts with any address and
spirit, as many people that were present observed : and this
remark the event has proved to be a true one. For as a
person was lately pursuing a pheasant that was wing-broken,
in Harteley Wood, he stumbled upon the stag by accident,
and ran in upon him as he lay concealed amidst a thick
brake of brambles and bushes.
OBSERVATIONS ON BIRDS.
BIRDS IN GENERAL.
severe weather, fieldfares, redwings, sky-
larks, and titlarks, resort to watered meadows
for food : the latter wades up to its belly in
pursuit of the pupse of insects, and runs along
upon the floating grass and weeds. Many
gnats are on the snow near the water ; these support the
birds in part.
320 OBSERVATIONS ON
Birds are much influenced in their choice of food by
colour, for though white currants are a much sweeter fruit
than red, yet they seldom touch the former till they have
devoured every bunch of the latter.
Redstarts,, flycatchers, and blackcaps arrive early in
April. If these little delicate beings are birds of passage
(as we have reason to suppose they are, because they are
never seen in winter) how could they, feeble as they seem,
bear up against such storms of snow and rain, and make
their way through such meteorous turbulences, as one
should suppose would embarrass and retard the most
hard}'- and resolute of the winged nation ? Yet they
keep their appointed times and seasons; and in spite of
frost and winds return to their stations periodically, as if
they had met with nothing to obstruct them. The with-
drawing and appearance of the short-winged summer birds
is a very puzzling circumstance in natural history ! l
When the boys bring me wasps' nests, my bantam fowls
fare deliciously, and when the combs are pulled to pieces,
devour the young wasps in their maggot state with the
highest glee and delight. Any insect-eating bird would do
the same; and therefore I have often wondered that the
accurate Mr. Ray should call one species of buzzard Suteo
apivorous sive vespivorous, the honey buzzard, because some
combs of wasps happened to be found in one of their nests.
The combs were conveyed thither doubtless for the sake of
the maggots or nymphs, and not for their honey: since
none is to be found in the combs of wasps. Birds of prey
occasionally feed on insects : thus have I seen a tame kite
picking up the female ants full of eggs with much satis-
faction.
1 That redstarts, flycatchers, blackcaps, and other slender-billed in-
sectivorous small birds, particularly the swallow tribe, make their first
appearance very early in the spring, is a well-known fact; though the
flycatcher is the latest of them all in its visit (as this accurate naturalist
observes in another place), for it is never seen before the month of May.
If these delicate creatures come to us from a distant country, they will
probably be exposed in their passage, as White justly remarks, to much
greater difficulties from storms and tempests than their feeble powers
BIRDS. 321
ROOKS.
ROOKS are continually fighting and pulling each other's nests
to pieces : these proceedings are inconsistent with living in
such close community. And yet if a pair offer to build on
a single tree, the nest is plundered and demolished at once.
Some rooks roost on their nest trees. The twigs which the
rooks drop in building supply the poor with brushwood to
light their fires. Some unhappy pairs are not permitted to
finish any nests till the rest have completed their building.
As soon as they get a few sticks together, a party comes
and demolishes the whole. As soon as rooks have finished
their nests, and before they lay, the cocks begin to feed the
hens, who receive their bounty with a fondling tremulous
voice, and fluttering wings, and all the little blandishments
that are expressed by the young, while in a helpless state.
This gallant deportment of the male is continued through
the whole season of incubation. These birds do not pair on
trees, nor in their nests, but on the ground in the open
fields.1
appear to be able to surmount : on the other hand, if we suppose them
to pass the winter in a dormant state in this country, concealed in
caverns or other hiding places sufficiently guarded from the extreme
cold of our winter to preserve their life, and that at the approach of
spring they revive from their torpid state and reassume their usual
powers of action, it will entirely remove the first difficulty, arising from
the storms and tempests they are liable to meet with in their passage ;
but how are we to get over the still greater difficulty of their revivi-
fication from their torpid state ? What degree of warmth in the tem-
perature of the air is necessary to produce that effect, and how it
operates on the functions of animal life, are questions not easily
answered.
How could White suppose that Ray named this species the honey
buzzard because it fed on honey, when he not only named it in Latin
Buteo apivorus sive vespivorus, but expressly says that " it feeds on
insects, and brings up its young with the maggots or nymphs of wasps ?"
That birds of prey, when in want of their proper food, flesh, some-
times feed on insects I have little doubt, and think I have observed the
common buzzard to settle on the ground and pick up insects of some
kind or other. — MARKWICK.
1 After the first brood of rooks are sufficiently fledged, they all leave
their nest trees in the daytime, and resort to some distant place in search
y
322
OBSERVATIONS ON
THRUSHES.
THEUSHES during long droughts are of great service in
hunting out shell snails, which they pull in pieces for their
young, and are thereby very serviceable in gardens. Missel
thrushes do not destroy the fruit in gardens like the other
species of Turdi, but feed on the berries of misletoe, and in
the spring on ivy berries, which then begin to ripen. In
the summer, when their young become fledged, they leave
neighbourhoods, and retire to sheep-walks and wild com-
mons.
MAGPIE.
The magpies, when they have young, destroy the broods
of missel thrushes ; though the dams are fierce birds, and
fight boldly in defence of their nests. It is probably to
avoid such insults, that this species of thrush, though wild
of food, but return regularly every evening, in vast flights, to their nest
trees, where, after flying round several times with much noise and cla-
mour, till they are all assembled together, they take up their abode for
the night. — MARKWJCK.
See Letter LIX. to Daines Barrington, p. 296. — ED.
BIRDS. 323
at other times, delights to build near houses, and in fre-
quented walks and gardens.1
POULTRY.
MANY creatures are endowed with a ready discernment to
see what will turn to their own advantage and emolument ;
and often discover more sagacity than could be expected.
Thus my neighbour's poultry watch for waggons .loaded
MALLARD.
with wheat, and running after them pick up a number of
grains that are shaken from the sheaves by the agitation of
the carriages. Thus, when my brother used to take down
1 Of the truth of the first of these observations I have been an eye-
witness, having seen the common thrush feeding on the shell snail.
In the very early part of this spring (1797) a bird of this species used
to sit every morning on the top of some high elms close by my windows,
and delight me with its charming song, attracted thither, probably, by
some ripe ivy berries that grew near the place.
I have remarked something like the latter fact, for I remember, many
years ago, seeing a pair of these birds fly up repeatedly and attack some
larger bird, which I suppose disturbed their nest in my orchard, uttering
at the same time violent shrieks. Since writing the above, I have seen
more than once a pair of these birds attack some magpies, that had dis-
turbed their nest, with great violence and loud shrieks. — MARKWICK.
324 OBSERVATIONS ON
his gun to shoot sparrows, his cats would run out before
him, to be ready to catch up the birds as they fell.
The earnest and early propensity of the Gallince to roost
on high is very observable ; and discovers a strong dread
impressed on their spirits respecting vermin that may annoy
them on the ground during the hours of darkness. Hence
poultry, if left to themselves and not housed, will perch the
winter through on yew trees and fir trees ; and turkeys and
guinea-fowls, heavy as they are, get up into apple trees :
pheasants also in woods sleep on trees to avoid foxes ; while
pea-fowls climb to the tops of the highest trees round their
owner's house for security, let the weather be ever so cold
or blowing. Partridges, it is true, roost on the ground,
not having the faculty of perching ; but then the same fear
prevails in their minds; for, through apprehensions from
pole-cats and stoats, they never trust themselves to coverts,
but nestle together in the midst of large fields, far removed
from hedges and coppices, which they love to haunt in the
day, and where at that season they can skulk more secure
from the ravage^ of rapacious birds.
As to ducks and geese, their awkward splay web-feet
forbid them to settle on trees; they therefore, in the hours
of darkness arid danger, betake themselves to their own
element, the water, where amidst large lakes and pools, like
ships riding at anchor, they float the whole night long in
peace and security.1
1 Guinea fowls not . only roost on high, but in hard weather resort,
even in the daytime, to the very tops of the highest trees.
Last winter, when the ground was covered with snow, I discovered all
my guinea fowls, in the middle of the day, sitting on the highest boughs
of some very tall elms, chattering and making a great clamour : I ordered
them to be driven down, lest they should be frozen to death in so ele-
vated a situation, but this was not effected without much difficulty, they
being very unwilling to quit their lofty abode, notwithstanding one of
them had its feet so much frozen that we were obliged to kill it. I know
not how to account for this, unless it was occasioned by their aversion to
the snow on the ground, they being birds that come originally from a
hot climate. [As to the effect of the glare of snow on poultry, see Letter
LXII. to Daines Barrrington, p. 303. — ED.]
Notwithstanding the awkward splay web-feet (as Mr. White calls
them) of the duck genus, some of the foreign species have the power of
BIRDS. 325
HEN PARTRIDGE.
A HEN partridge came out of a ditch, and ran along shivering
with her wings, and crying out as if wounded and unable to
get from us. While the dam acted this distress, the boy
who attended me saw her brood, that was small and unable
to fly, run for shelter into an old fox-earth under the bank.
So wonderful a power is instinct.1
settling on the boughs of trees apparently with great ease ; an instance
of which I have seen in the Earl of Ashburnham's menagerie, where the
summer duck (Anas sponsa) flew up and settled on the branch of an
oak tree in my presence ; but whether any of them roost on trees in the
night, we are not informed by any author that I am acquainted with.
I suppose not, but that, like the rest of the genus, they sleep on the
water, where the birds of this genus are not always perfectly secure, as
will appear from the following circumstance which happened in this
neighbourhood a few years since, as I was credibly informed. A female
fox was found in the morning drowned in the same pond in which were
several geese, and it was supposed that in the night the fox swam into
the pond to devour the geese, but was attacked by the gander, which,
being the most powerful in its own element, buffeted the fox with its
wings about the head till it was drowned. — MARKWICK.
1 It is not uncommon to see an old partridge feign itself wounded and
run along on the ground fluttering and crying before either dog or man,
to draw them away from its helpless unfledged young ones. I have seen
it often, and once in particular I saw a remarkable instance of the old
bird's solicitude to save its brood. As I was hunting a young pointer,
the dog ran on a brood of very small partridges ; the old bird cried, flut-
326 OBSERVATIONS ON
HYBRID PHEASANT.
LORD STAWELL sent me from the great lodge in the Holt a
curious bird for my inspection. It was found by the
spaniels of one of his keepers in a coppice, and shot on the
wing. The shape, and air, and habit of the bird, and the
scarlet ring round the eyes, agreed well with the appearance
of a cock pheasant : but then the head and neck, and breast
and belly, were of a glossy black : and though it weighed
three pounds three ounces and a half,1 the weight of a large
full-grown cock pheasant, yet there were no signs of any
spurs on the legs, as is usual with all grown cock pheasants,
who have long ones. The legs and feet were naked of
feathers ; and therefore it could be nothing of the grouse
kind. In the tail were no long bending feathers, such as
cock pheasants usually have, and are characteristic of the
sex. The tail was much shorter than the tail of a hen
pheasant, and blunt and square at the end. The back,
wing-feathers, and tail, were all of a pale russet, curiously
streaked, somewhat like the upper parts of a hen partridge.
I returned it with my verdict, that it was probably a spurious
or hybrid hen bird, bred between a cock pheasant and some
domestic fowl. When I came to talk with the keeper who
brought it, he told me that some pea-hens had been known
last summer to haunt the coppices and coverts where this
mule was found.
Mr. Elmer, of Farnham, the famous game painter, was
employed to take an exact copy of this curious bird.2
tered, and ran tumbling along just before the dog's nose till she had
drawn him to a considerable distance, when she took wing and flew still
farther off, but not out of the field : on this the dog returned to me, near
which place the young ones lay concealed in the grass, which the old
bird no sooner perceived than she flew back again to us, settled just
before the dog's nose again, and by rolling and tumbling about drew off
his attention from her young, and thus preserved her brood a second
time. I have also seen, when a kite has been hovering over a covey of
young partridges, the old birds fly up at the bird of prey, screaming and
fighting with all their might to preserve their brood. — MARK WICK.
1 Hen pheasants usually weigh only two pounds ten ounces. — G. W.
2 The picture was subsequently presented to Gilbert White by Lord
Stawell. See Jesse's " Gleanings," second series, p. 159. — ED.
BIRDS. 327
[Ifc ought to be mentioned that some good judges have
imagined this bird to have been a stray grouse or black
cock ; it is, however, to be observed, that Mr. W. remarks,
that its legs and feet were naked, whereas those of the
grouse are feathered to the toes. — J. A.] l
1 Dr. Latham observes, that " pea-hens, after they have done laying,
sometimes assume the plumage of the male bird," and has given a figure
of the male -feathered pea-hen now to be seen in the Leverian Museum ;
and M. Salerne remarks, that "the hen pheasant, when she has done
laying and sitting, will get the plumage of the male." May not this
hybrid pheasant (as Mr. White calls it) be a bird of this kind ? that
is, an old hen pheasant which had just begun to assume the plumage of
the cock. — MARKWICK.
Concerning the hybrid pheasant, John Hunter, in the " Philosophical
Transactions," Art. xxx. 1760, says, " The subject of the account is a
hen pheasant with the feathers of the cock. The author concludes,
that it is most probable that all those hen pheasants, which are found
wild, and have the feathers of the cock, were formerly perfect hens, but
that now they are changed with age, and perhaps by certain constitutional
circumstances." We may add that the assumption of male plumage by
the hen is not confined to the pheasant.
The Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert, referring to the identical specimen
described by Gilbert White, says: — *' I saw this curious bird stuffed, in
the collection of the Earl of Egremont at Pet worth, in the year 1804,
and I have not the slightest hesitation in pronouncing that it was a
mule between the black cock and the common pheasant. I was in-
formed at the time by Lord Egremont that it was Mr. White's bird,
and I examined it with the most minute attention, compared it with the
description in the * Naturalist's Calendar,' and wrote at the moment
marginal memoranda on my copy of that book. In Mr. White's descrip-
tion of the bird, where he says that the back, wing-feathers, and tail,
were somewhat like the upper parts of a hen partridge, I scratched out,
at the time, the words ' somewhat likej and wrote in the margin ' much
browner than,' and with that alteration I believe Mr. White's descrip-
tion to be quite correct ; but I noted down that the plate was exceed-
ingly ill coloured, which indeed may be perceived by comparing it with
the description. I did not then, nor do I now, entertain the slightest
doubt of its being a mule between the black game and the pheasant. I
understand that some doubt exists at present whether it was Mr.
White's identical specimen, though I am quite positive from my notes
that it was at the time (now above thirty years ago) stated to me to
have been so ; and I am persuaded that it was his : but if there was
any misunderstanding on that point, and it could have been a second
specimen killed in the same line of country, there is not the slightest
doubt that it was of like origin and appearance, for I had no excep-
328 OBSERVATIONS ON
LAND-RAIL,
A MAN brought me a land-rail or daker-hen, a bird so
rare in this district that we seldom see more than one or
two in a season, and those only in autumn.1 This is deemed
a bird of passage by all the writers ; yet from its formation
seems to be poorly qualified for migration; for its wings are
short, and placed so forward, and out of the centre of gra-
vity, that it flies in a very heavy and embarrassed manner,
with its legs hanging down ; and can hardly be sprung a
second time, as it runs very fast, and seems to depend more
on the swiftness of its feet than on its flying.
When we came to draw it, we found the entrails so soft
and tender, that in appearance they might have been dressed
like the ropes of a woodcock. The craw or crop was small
tions to take of White's description, except that the black was much
browner than that of a partridge instead of somewhat like, which is not
in fact contradictory. The whole of Lord Egremont's collection was after-
wards destroyed by maggots, and the specimen has long ceased to exist.
As I understand it has been surmised that the hybrid bird described by
White might have been a young black cock in moult, I wish to state, in
the most positive manner, that I am certain it was not. I had, at the
period when I examined it, been in the annual habit of shooting young
black game, and was perfectly well acquainted with all their variations
of plumage ; and had also been accustomed to see them reared in con-
finement. It is a point on which I could not be deceived. The bird
had neither the legs and feet, nor the plumage, of a black cock in any
stage of its growth." — ED.
1 The scarcity of the land-rail in the neighbourhood of Selborne in
Gilbert White's day is not a little remarkable. Considering that the
bird migrates to this country in spring from the south of Europe, one
would suppose that in Hants and Sussex of all counties it would be
found in tolerable plenty. It is by no means scarce there at the present
day. In September, 1863, the writer, while shooting in company with
a friend within ten miles of Selborne, killed three brace of land-rails in
one day. This was on the 4th September, and the birds were all shot
out of clover. If the species were not really overlooked by Gilbert
White, owing to its skulking habits, the increase in its numbers at the
present day in the district of which he wrote must be attributed to the
alteration which has taken place in the mode of cultivating the surround-
ing farms, and the greater attraction which is now afforded to the bird
in the way of food and shelter. — ED.
BIRDS. 329
and lank, containing a mucus; the gizzard thick and
strong, and filled with small shell snails, some whole, and
many ground to pieces through the attrition which is occa-
sioned by the muscular force and motion of that intestine.
We saw no gravel among the food : perhaps the shell snails
might perform the functions of gravels or pebbles, and
might grind one another.
Land-rails used to abound formerly, I remember, in the
low wet bean fields of Christian Malford in North Wilts,
and in the meadows near Paradise Gardens at Oxford, where
I have often heard them cry crex, crex.
The bird mentioned above weighed seven ounces and a
half, was fat and tender, and in flavour like the flesh of
a woodcock. The liver was very large and delicate.1
FOOD OF THE RING-DOVE.
ONE of my neighbours shot a ring-dove on an evening as
it was returning from feed and going to roost. When his
wife had picked and drawn it, she found its craw stuffed
with the most nice and tender tops of turnips. These she
washed and boiled, and so sat down to a choice and deli-
1 Land-rails are more plentiful with us [at Catsfield, near Battle. —
ED.] than in the neighbourhood of Selborne. I have found four brace
in an afternoon, and a friend of mine lately shot nine in two adjoining
fields ; but I never saw them in any other season than the autumn.
That it is a bird of passage there can be little doubt, though Mr.
White thinks it poorly qualified for migration, on account of the wings
being short, and not placed in the exact centre of gravity : how that
may be I cannot say, but I know that its heavy sluggish flight is not
owing to its inability of flying faster, for I have seen it fly very swiftly,
although in general its actions are sluggish. Its unwillingness to rise
proceeds, I imagine, from its sluggish disposition, and its great timidity,
for it will sometimes squat so close to the ground as to suffer itself to
be taken up by the hand, rather than rise ; and yet it will at times run
very fast.
What Mr. White remarks respecting the small shell snails found in
its gizzard, confirms my opinion, that it frequents corn fields, seed
clover, and brakes or fern, more for the sake of snails, slugs, and other
insects [a lapsus calami — ED.] which abound in such places, than for the
grain or seeds ; and that it is entirely an insectivorous bird. — MARKWICK.
330 OBSERVATIONS ON
cate plate of greens, culled and provided in this extraordi-
nary manner.
Hence we may see that granivorous birds, when grain
fails, can subsist on the leaves of vegetables. There is
reason to suppose that they would not long be healthy
without ; for turkeys, though corn-fed, delight in a variety
of plants, such as cabbage, lettuce, endive, &c., and poultry
pick much grass ; while geese live for months together on
commons by grazing alone.1
" Nought is useless made :
On the barren heath
The shepherd tends his flock that daily crop
Their verdant dinner from the mossy turf
Sufficient : after them the cackling goose,
Close grazer, finds wherewith to ease her want."
PHILIPS'S Cider.
HEN HARRIER.
ME. WHITE, of Newton, sprung a pheasant in a wheat
stubble, and shot at it ; when, notwithstanding the report
of the gun, it was immediately pursued by the blue hawk,
known by the name of the hen harrier, but escaped into
some covert. He then sprung a second, and third, in the
same field, that got away in the same manner ; the hawk
hovering round him all the while that he was beating the
field, conscious no doubt of the game that lurked in the
stubble. Hence we may conclude that this bird of prey
was rendered very bold and daring by hunger, and that
hawks cannot always seize their game when they please.
We may further observe, that they cannot pounce their
1 That many granivorous birds feed also on the herbage or leaves of
plants, there can be no doubt : partridges and larks frequently feed on
the green leaves of turnips, which gives a peculiar flavour to their flesh,
that is, to me, very palatable : the flavour also of wild ducks and geese
greatly depends on the nature of their food ; and their flesh frequently
contracts a rank unpleasant taste, from their having lately fed on strong
marshy aquatic plants, as I suppose.
That the leaves of vegetables are wholesome and conducive to the
health of birds, seems probable, for many people fat their clucks and
turkeys with the leaves of lettuce chopped small. — MARKWICK.
BIRDS. 331
quarry on the ground, where it might be able to make a
stout resistance, since so large a fowl as a pheasant could
not but be visible to the piercing eye of a hawk, when
hovering over the field. Hence that propensity of cower-
ing and squatting till they are almost trod on, which no
doubt was intended as a mode of security : though long
rendered destructive to the whole race of GaMince by the
invention of nets and guns.1
GREAT NORTHERN DIVER, OR LOON.
As one of my neighbours was traversing Wolmer Forest
from Bramshot across the moors, he found a large un-
common bird fluttering in the heath, but not wounded,
1 Of the great boldness and rapacity of birds of prey, when urged on
by hunger, I have seen several instances ; particularly when shooting in
the winter in company with two friends, a woodcock flew across us
closely pursued by a small hawk ; we all three fired at the woodcock
instead of the hawk, which, notwithstanding the report of three guns
close by it, continued its pursuit of the woodcock, struck it down, and
carried it off, as we afterwards discovered.
At another time, when partridge shooting with a friend, we saw a
ring-tail hawk [the female hen-harrier. — ED.] rise out of a pit with
some large bird in its claws ; though at a great distance, we both fired
and obliged it to drop its prey, which proved to be one of the par-
tridges which we were in pursuit of. And lastly, in an evening, I shot
at and plainly saw that I had wounded a partridge, but it being late
was obliged to go home without finding it again. The next morning I
walked round my land without any gun, but a favourite old spaniel
followed my heels. When I came near the field where I wounded the
bird the evening before, I heard the partridges call, and seeming to be
much disturbed. On my approaching the bar-way they all rose, some
on my right, and some on my left hand ; and just before and over my
head I perceived (though indistinctly, from the extreme velocity of
their motion) two birds fly directly against each other, when instantly,
to my great astonishment, down dropped a partridge at my feet ; the
dog immediately seized it, and on examination I found the blood flow
very fast from a fresh wound in the head, but there was some dry
clotted blood on its wings and side ; whence I concluded that a hawk
had singled out my wounded bird as the object of his prey, and had
struck it down the instant that my approach had obliged the birds to
rise on the wing : but the space between the hedges was so small, and
the motion of the birds so instantaneous and quick, that I could not
distinctly observe the operation. — MARKWICK.
332 OBSERVATIONS ON
which he brought home alive. On examination, it proved
to be Colymbus glacialis, LINN., the great speckled diver
or loon, which is most excellently described in Willughby's
Ornithology.
Eyery part and proportion of this bird is so incomparably
adapted to its mode of life, that in no instance do we see
the wisdom of God in the creation to more advantage. The
head is sharp and smaller than the part of the neck ad-
joining, in order that it may pierce the water; the wings
are placed forward and out of the centre of gravity, for a
purpose which shall be noticed hereafter ; the thighs quite
at the podex, in order to facilitate diving ; and the legs are
flat, and as sharp backwards almost as the edge of a knife,
that in striking they may easily cut the water ; while the
feet are palmated, and broad for swimming, yet so folded
up when advanced forward to take a fresh stroke, as to be
full as narrow as the shank. The two exterior toes of the
feet are longest; the nails flat and broad, resembling the
human, which give strength and increase the power of
swimming. The foot, when expanded, is not at right
angles to the leg or body of the bird ; but the exterior part
inclining towards the head forms an acute angle with the
body ; the intention being not to give motion in the line of
the legs themselves, but, by the combined impulse of both,
in an intermediate line, the line of the body.
Most people know, that have observed at all, that the
swimming of birds is nothing more than a walking in the
water, where one foot succeeds the other as on the land ;
yet no one, as far as I am aware, has remarked that diving
fowls, while under water, impel and row themselves forward
by a motion of their wings, as well as by the impulse of
their feet; but such is really the case, as any person may
easily be convinced, who will observe ducks when hunted
by dogs in a clear pond. Nor do I know that any one has
given a reason why the wings of diving fowls are placed so
forward : doubtless, not for the purpose of promoting their
speed in flying, since that position certainly impedes it ; but
probably for the increase of their motion under water, by
the use of four oars instead of two ; yet were the wings and
BIRDS.
feet nearer together, as in land birds, they would, when in
action, rather hinder than assist one another.
This Golymbus was of considerable bulk, weighing only
three drachms short of three pounds avoirdupois. It
measured in length from the bill to the tail (which was very
short) two feet; and to the extremities of the toes four
inches more ; and the breadth of the wings expanded was
forty- two inches. A person attempted to eat the body, but
found it very strong and rancid, as is the flesh of all birds
living on fish. Divers or loons, though bred in the most
northerly parts of Europe, yet are seen with us in very
severe winters ; and on the Thames are called sprat loons,
because they prey much on that sort of fish.
The legs of the Golymbi and Mergi are placed so very
backward, and so out of all centre of gravity, that these birds
cannot walk at all. They are called by Linnaeus compedes,
because they move on the ground as if shackled or fettered.1
1 These accurate and ingenious observations, tending to set forth in a
proper light the wonderful works of God in the creation, and to point
out His wisdom in adapting the singular form and position of the limbs
of this bird to the particular mode in which it is destined to pass the
greatest part of its life in an element much denser than the air, do Mr.
White credit, not only as a naturalist, but as a man and as a philosopher,
in the truest sense of the word, in my opinion ; for were we enabled to
trace the works of nature minutely and accurately, we should find, not
only that every bird, but every creature, was equally well adapted to
the purpose for which it was intended ; though this fitness and propriety
of form is more striking in such animals as are destined to any uncommon
mode of life.
I have had in my possession two birds, which, though of a different
genus, bear a great resemblance to Mr. White's Colymbus, in their
manner of life, which is spent chiefly in the water, where they swim and
dive with astonishing rapidity, for which purpose their fin-toed feet,
placed far behind, and very short wings, are particularly well adapted,
and show the wisdom of God in the creation as conspicuously as the bird
before mentioned. These birds were the greater and lesser crested
grebe, Podiceps cristatus et auritus. What surprised me most was, that
the first of these birds was found alive on dry ground, about seven miles
from the sea, to which place there was no communication by water.
How did it get so far from the sea ? its wings and legs being so ill
adapted either to flying or walking. The lesser crested grebe was also
found in a fresh water pond which had no communication with other
water, at some miles distance from the sea. — MARKWICK.
334 OBSERVATIONS ON
STONE CURLEW.
ON the 27th of February, 1788, stone curlews were heard
to pipe; and on March 1st, after it was dark, some were
passing over the village, as might be perceived by their
quick short note, which they use in their nocturnal excur-
sions by way of watch- word, that they may not stray and
lose their companions.
Thus, we see, that retire whithersoever they may in the
winter, they return again early in the spring, and are, as it
now appears, the first summer birds that come back. Per-
haps the mildness of the season may have quickened the
emigration of the curlews this year.
They spend the day in high elevated fields and sheep-
walks; but seem to descend in the night to streams and
meadows, perhaps for water, which their upland haunts do
not afford them.1
CHIFF CHAFF.
THE smallest uncrested willow-wren, or chiff-chaff, is the
next early summer bird which we have remarked ; it utters
two sharp piercing notes, so loud in hollow woods as to
occasion an echo, and is usually first heard about the 20th
of March.
FERN-OWL, OR GOAT-SUCKER.
THE country people have a notion that the fern-owl, or
churn-owl, or eve-jarr, which they also call a puckeridge,
is very injurious to weanling calves, by inflicting, as it
strikes at them, the fatal distemper known to cow-leeches
by the name of puckeridge. Thus does this harmless ill-
fated bird fall under a double imputation which it by no
means deserves — in Italy, of sucking the teats of goats,
1 On the 31st of January, 1792, I received a bird of this species,
which had been recently killed by a neighbouring farmer, who said
that he had frequently seen it in his fields during the former part of the
winter : this perhaps was an occasional straggler, which, by some acci-
dent, was prevented from accompanying its companions in their migra-
tion.— MARKWICK.
BIRDS. 335
whence it is called Caprimulgus, and with us, of communi-
cating a deadly disorder to cattle. But the truth of the
matter is, the malady above-mentioned is occasioned by the
CEstrus lovis, a dipterous insect, which lays its eggs along
the chines of kine, where the maggots, when hatched, eat
their way through the hide of the beast into the flesh, and
grow to a very large size. I have just talked with a man,
who says he has more than once stripped calves who have
died of the puckeridge ; that the ail or complaint lay along
the chine, where the flesh was much swelled, and filled with
purulent matter. Once I myself saw a large rough maggot
of this sort squeezed out of the back of a cow.
These maggots in Essex are called wormils.
The least observation and attention would convince men,
that these birds neither injure the goatherd nor the grazier,
but are perfectly harmless, and subsist alone, being night
birds, on night insects, such as Scarabcei, and Phalcenw;
and through the month of July mostly on the Scarabceus
solstitialis, which in many districts abounds at that season.
Those that we have opened have always had their craws
stuffed with large night moths and their eggs, and pieces of
chafers : nor does it anywise appear how they can, weak
and unarmed as they seem, inflict any harm upon kine,
unless they possess the powers of animal magnetism, and
can affect them by fluttering over them.
A fern-owl, this evening (August 27), showed off in
a very unusual and entertaining manner, by hawking
round and round the circumference of my great* spread-
ing oak for twenty times following, keeping mostly close to
the grass, but occasionally glancing up amidst the boughs
of the tree. This amusing bird was then in pursuit of a
brood of some particular Phalcena belonging to the oak, of
which there are several sorts ; and exhibited on the occasion
a command of wing superior, I think, to that of the swallow
itself.
When a person approaches the haunt of fern-owls in an
evening, they continue flying round the head of the obtruder;
and by striking their wings together above their backs, in
the manner that the pigeons called smiters are known to
336 OBSERVATIONS ON
do, make a smart snap; perhaps at that time they are
jealous for their young, and this noise and gesture are
intended by way of menace.
Fern-owls have attachment to oaks, no doubt on account
of food; for the next evening we saw one again several
times among the boughs of the same tree ; but it did not
skim round its stem over the grass, as on the evening
before. In May these birds find the Scarabceus melolontha
on the oak ; and the Scarabceus solstitialis at midsummer.
These peculiar birds can only be watched and observed for
two hours in the twenty- four; and then in a dubious twilight
an hour after sunset and an hour before sunrise.
On this day (July 14, 1789) a woman brought me two
eggs of a fern-owl, or eve-jarr, which she found on the
verge of the Hanger, to the left of the hermitage, under a
beechen shrub. This person, who lives just at the foot of
the Hanger, seems well acquainted with these nocturnal
swallows, and says she has often found their eggs near that
place, and that they lay only two at a time, on the bare
ground. The eggs were oblong, dusky, and streaked
somewhat in the manner of the plumage of the parent bird,
and were equal in size at each end. The dam was sitting
on the eggs when found, which contained the rudiments of
young, and would have been hatched perhaps in a week.
From hence we may see the time of their breeding, which
corresponds pretty well with that of the swift, as does also
the period of their arrival. Each species is usually seen
about the beginning of May. Each breeds but once in a
summer; each lays only two eggs.
July 4, 1790. The woman who brought me two fern-
owl's eggs last year on July 14, on this day produced me
two more, one of which had been laid this morning, as
appears plainly, because there was only one in the nest the
evening before. They were found, as last July, on the
verge of the down above the hermitage, under a beechen
shrub, on the naked ground. Last year those eggs were
full of young, and just ready to be hatched.
These circumstances point out the exact time when
these curious nocturnal migratory birds lay their eggs and
BIRDS. 337
hatch their young. Fern-owls, like snipes, sfcono curlews
and some other birds, make no nest. Birds that build on
the ground do not make much of nests.1
SAND MARTINS.
MARC [i 23, 1788. A gentleman, who was this week on a
visit at Waverley, took the opportunity of examining some
of the holes in the sand banks with which that district
abounds. As these are undoubtedly bored by bank martins,
and are the places where they avowedly breed, he was in
hopes they might have slept there also, and that he might
have surprised them just as they were awaking from their win-
ter slumbers. When he had dug for some time, he found the
holes were horizontal and serpentine, as I had observed
before, and that the nests were deposited at the inner end,
and had been occupied by broods in former summers; but
no torpid birds were to be found. He opened and examined
about a dozen holes. Another gentleman made the same
search many years ago, with as little success.
These holes were in depth about two feet.
March 21, 1790. A single bank or sand martin wns seen
hovering and playing round the sand pit at Short Heath,
where in the summer they abound.
April 9, 1793. A sober hind assures us that this day,
on Wish-hanger common, between Hedleigh and Frinsham,
he saw several bank martins playing in and out, and hang-
ing before some nest-holes in a sand hill, where these birds
usually nestle.
This incident confirms my suspicions that this species of
1 No author that I am acquainted with has given so accurate and
pleasing an account of the manners and habits of the goat-sucker as
Mr. White, taken entirely from his own observations. Its being a noc-
turnal bird, has prevented my having many opportunities of observing
it. I suspect that it passes the day in concealment amidst the dark and
shady gloom of deep-wooded dells, or as they are called here gills ;
having more than once seen it roused from such solitary places by my
dogs, when shooting in the daytime. I have also sometimes seen it in
an evening, but not long enough to take notice of its habits and man-
ners. I have never seen it but in the summer, between the months of
May and September. — MARKWICK.
L
338 OBSERVATIONS ON
Hiruncfo is to be seen first of any, and gives great reason to
suppose that they do not leave their wild haunts at all, but
are secreted amidst the clefts and caverns of those abrupt
cliffs where they usually spend their summers.
The late severe weather considered, it is not very pro-
bable that those birds should have migrated so early from a
tropical region, through all these cutting winds and pinching
frosts ; but it is easy to suppose that tl^ey may, like bats
and flies, have been awakened by the influence of the sun,
amidst their secret latebrce, where they have spent the un-
comfortable foodless months in a torpid state, and the pro-
foundest of slumbers.
There is a large pond at Wish-hanger, which induces
these sand martins to frequent that district. For I have
ever remarked that they haunt near great waters, either
rivers or lakes.1
SWALLOWS CONGREGATING AND DISAPPEARING.
DURING the severe winds that often prevail late in tha
1 Here, and in many other passages of his writings, this very ingenious
naturalist favours the opinion that part at least of the swallow tribe pass
their winter in a torpid state, in the same manner as bats and flies, and
revive again on the approach of spring.
I have frequently taken notice of all those circumstances which in-
duced Mr. White to suppose that some of the Hirundines lie torpid
during winter. I have seen, so late as November, on a finer day than
usual at that season of the year, two or three swallows flying backwards
and forwards under a warm hedge, or on the sunny side of some old
building ; nay, I once saw, on the 8th of December, two martins flying
about very briskly, the weather being mild. I had not seen any con-
siderable number either of swallows or martins for a considerable time
before ; from whence then could these few birds come, if not from some
hole or cavern where they had laid themselves up for the Avinter?
Surely it will not be asserted that these birds migrate back again from
some distant tropical region, merely on the appearance of a fine day or
two at this late season of the year. Again, very early in the spring,
and sometimes immediately after very cold severe weather, on its growing
a little warmer, a few of these birds suddenly make their appearance,
long before the generality of them are seen. These appearances certainly
favour the opinion of their passing the winter in a torpid state, but do
not absolutely prove the fact ; for who ever saw them reviving of their
own accord from their torpid state, without being first brought to the
fire, and, as it were, forced into life again ; soon after which revivifica-
tion they constantly die. — MAUKWICK.
BIELS. 339
spring, it is not easy to say how the Hirundines subsist ; for
they withdraw themselves, and are hardly ever seen, nor do
any insects appear for their support. That they can retire
to rest, and sleep away these uncomfortable periods as the
bats do, is a matter rather to be suspected than proved : or
do they not rather spend their time in deep and sheltered
vales near waters, where insects are more likely to be found ?
Certain it is that hardly any individuals of this genus have
at such times been seen for several days together.
September 13, 1791. The congregating flocks of Hirun-
dines on the church and tower are very beautiful and
amusing ! When they fly off all together from the roof, on
any alarm, they quite swarm in the air. But they soon settle
in heaps, and preening their feathers, and lifting up their
wings to admit the sun, seem highly to enjoy the warm
situation. Thus they spend the heat of the day, preparing
for their emigration, and, as it were, consulting when and
where they are to go. The flight about the church seems
to consist chiefly of house martins, about four hundred in
number ; but there are other places of rendezvous about tho
village frequented at the same time,
It is remarkable that though most of them sit on the
battlements and roof, yet many hang or cling for some time
by their claws against the surface of the walls, in a manner
not practised by them at any other time of their remaining
with us. . ,
The swallows seem to delight more in holding their
assemblies on trees.
November 3, 1789. Two swallows were seen this morn-
ing at Newton vicarage-house, hovering and settling on the
roofs and out-buildings. None have been observed at Sol-
borne since October 11. It is very remarkable' that after
the Hirundines have disappeared for some weeks, a few are
occasionally seen again, sometimes in the first week in
November, and that only for one day. Do they not with-
draw and slumber in some hiding-place during the interval ?
for we cannot suppose they had migrated to warmer climes,
and so returned again for one day. Is it not more probable
that they are awakened from sleep, and, like the bats, are
come forth to collect a little food ? Bats appear at all
3iO OBSERVATIONS ON
seasons through the autumn and spring months, when the
thermometer is at 50°, because then moths, Phalcence, are
stirring.
These swallows looked like young ones.1
WAGTAILS.
WHILE the cows are feeding in moist low pastures, broods
of wagtails, white and gray,7 run round them close up to
their noses, and under their very bellies, availing themselves
of the flies that settle on their legs, and probably finding
worms and larvae that are roused by the trampling of their
feet. Nature is such an oeconomist, that the most incon-
gruous animals can avail themselves of each other ! Interest
makes strange friendships.3
WRYNECK.
THESE birds appear on the grassplots and walks : they walk
a little as well as hop, and thrust their bills into the turf, in
1 Of their migration the proofs are such as will scarcely admit of a
doubt. Sir Charles Wager and Captain Wright saw vast flocks of them
at sea. when on their passage from one country to another. Our author,
Mr. White, saw what he deemed the actual migration of these birds, and
which he has described in his History of Selborne, [see Letter XXIII. to
Pennant, p. 78. — ED.] and of their congregating together on the roofs of
churches and other buildings, and on trees, previous to their departure,
many instances occur ; particularly I once observed a large flock of house
martins on the roof of the church here at Catsfield, which acted exactly
in the manner here described by Mr. White, sometimes preening their
feathers and spreading their wings to the sun, and then flying off all
together, but soon returning to their former situation. The greatest
part of these birds seemed to be young ones. — MARK WICK.
2 This is the bird previously called the yellow wagtail in Letter XIII.
to Pennant. See page 47, note 4. — ED.
3 Birds continually avail themselves of particular and unusual circum-
stances to procure their food ; thus wagtails keep playing about the
noses and legs of cattle as they feed, in quest of flies and other insects
which abound near those animals, and great numbers of them will follow
close to the plough to devour the worms, &c., that are turned up by that
instrument. The redbreast attends the gardener when digging his bor-
ders, and will, with great familiarity and tameness, pick out the worms
almost close to his spade, as I have frequently seen. Starlings and
magpies very often sit on the backs of sheep and deer to pick out their
ticks. MARKWiCK.
BIRDS. 341
quest, I conclude, of ants, which are their food. While
they hold their bills in the grass, they draw out their prey
with their tongues, which are so long as to be coiled round
their heads.
HAWFINCH OR GROSBEAK.
MR. B. shot a cock grosbeak, which he had observed to
haunt his garden for more than a fortnight. I began to
accuse this bird of making sad havoc among the buds of the
cherries, gooseberries, and wall-fruit of all the neighbouring
orchards. Upon opening its crop or craw, no buds were
to be seen, but a mass of kernels of the stones of fruits.
Mr. B. observed that this bird frequented the spot where
plum trees grow, and that he had seen it with somewhat
hard in its mouth, which it broke with difficulty: these
were the stones of damsons. The Latin ornithologists call
this bird Coccotkraustes, i.e. berry-breaker, because with its
large horny beak it cracks and breaks the shells of stone
fruits for the sake of the seed or kernel. Birds of this sort
are rarely seen in England, and only in winter.1
OBSERVATIONS ON INSECTS AND
YERMES.
INSECTS IN GENERAL.
HE day and night insects occupy the annuals
alternately : the Papilios, Muscce, and Apes
are succeeded at the close of the day by
Fhakcnce, earwigs, woodlice, &c. In the
dusk of the evening, when beetles begin to
buz, partridges begin to call ; these two circumstances are
exactly coincident.
1 I have never seen this rare bird but during the severest cold of the
hardest winters, at which season of the year I have had in my possession
two or three that were killed in this neighbourhood in different years. —
MARK WICK.
Of late years this species has become much commoner in England,
342 OBSERVATIONS ON
Ivy is the last flower that supports the hymenopterous
and dipterous insects. On sunny days, quite on to Novem-
ber, they swarm on trees covered with this plant ; and when
they disappear, probably retire under the shelter of its
leaves, concealing themselves between its fibres and the
trees which it entwines.1
Spiders, woodlice, Lcpismce in cupboards and among
sugar, some Empides, gnats, flies of several species, some
PJidlcence in hedges, earthworms, &c., are stirring at all
times, when winters are mild ; and are of great service to
those soft-billed birds that never leave us.
On every sunny day the winter through, clouds of iusects,
usually called gnats (I suppose Tipulcc and Empides) appear
sporting and dancing over the tops of the evergreen trees
in the shrubbery, and frisking about as if the business of
generation was still going on. Hence it appears that these
Diptera (which by their sizes appear to be of different species)
are not subject to a torpid state in the winter as most
winged insects are. At night, and in frosty weather, and
when it rains and blows, they seem to retire into those trees.
They often are out in a fog.*
HUMMING IN THE AIR.
THERE is a natural occurrence to be met with upon the
highest part of our down in hot summer days, which always
amuses me much, without giving me any satisfaction with
respect to the cause of it ; and that is a loud audible hum-
ming of bees in the air, though not one insect is to be seen.
This sound is to be heard distinctly the whole common
through, from the Money-dells, to Mr. White's avenue gate.
Any person would suppose that a large swarm of bees was
nesting now in many counties where formerly it was chiefly observed as-
a winter visitant. Cf. " Handbook of Britinh Birds," p. 29. — ED.
1 This I have often observed, having seen bees and other winged
insects swarming about the flowers of the ivy very late in the autumn.
— MARKWICK.
2 This I have also seen, and have frequently observed swarms of
little winged insects playing up and down in the air in the middle of
winter, even when the ground has been covered with snow. — MARKWICK.
INSECTS AND VERMES. 343
in motion, and playing about over his head. This noise was
heard last week, on June 28th.
" Resounds the living surface of the ground,
Nor undelightful is the ceaseless hum
To him who muses at noon."
" Thick in yon stream of light a thousand ways,
Upward and downward, thwarting and convolved,
The quivering nations sport." THOMSON'S Seasons.
CHAFERS.
COCKCHAFERS seldom abound oftener than once in three or
four years ; when they swarm they deface the trees and
hedges. Whole woods of oaks are stripped bare by them.
Chafers are eaten by the turkey, the rook, and the house
sparrow.
The Scarabceus solstitialis first appears about June 26 ;
they are very punctual in their coming out every year.
They are a small species, about half the size of the May
chafer, and are known in some parts by the name of the fern
chafer.1
PTINUS PECTINICORNIS.
THOSE maggots that make worm holes in tables, chairs,
bedposts, &c., and destroy wooden furniture, especially where
there is any sap, are the larvae of the Ptinus pectinicornis .
This insect, it is probable, deposits its eggs on the surface,
and the worms eat their way in.
In their holes they turn into their pupa state, and so come
forth winged in July ; eating their way through the valances
or curtains of a bed, or any other furniture that happens to
obstruct their passage.
1 A singular circumstance relative to the cockchafer, or, as it is called
here, the May-bug, Scarabceus melolontha, happened this year (1800) : — -
My gardener in digging some ground found, about six inches under
the surface, two of these insects alive and perfectly formed so early of
the 24th of March. When he brought them to me, they appeared to
be as perfect and as much alive as in the midst of summer, crawling
about as briskly as ever : yet I saw no more of this insect till the 22nd
of May. when it began to make its appearance. How comes it, that
though it was perfectly formed so early as the 24th of March, it did not
show itself above ground till nearly two months afterwards ? — MARK WICK
344 OBSERVATIONS ON
They seem to be most inclined to breed in beecli ; hence
beech will not make lasting utensils, or furniture. If their
eggs are deposited on the surface, frequent rubbings will
preserve wooden furniture.1
BLATTA ORIENTALIS — COCKROACH.
A NEIGHBOUR complained to me that her house was overrun
with a kind of black beetle, or, as she expressed herself, with
a kind of black bob, which swarmed in her kitchen when
they get up in a morning before daybreak.
Soon after this account, I observed an unusual insect in
one of my dark chimney closets, and find since, that in the
night they swarm also in my kitchen. On examination, I
soon ascertained the species to be the Blatta orientalis of
Linnaeus, and the Blatta molendinaria of Mouffet. The
male is winged ; the female is not, but shows somewhat like
the rudiments of wings, as if in the pupa state.
These insects belonged originally to the warmer parts of
America, and were conveyed from thence by shipping to the
East Indies; and by means of commerce begin to prevail in
the more northern parts of Europe, as Russia, Sweden, &c.
How long they have abounded in England I cannot say ; but
have never observed them in my house till lately.
They love warmth, and haunt chimney closets, and the
backs of ovens; Poda says that these and house crickets
will not associate together; but he is mistaken in that
assertion, as Linnaeus suspected he was. They are altogether
night insects (lucifugce), never coming forth till the rooms
are dark and still, and escaping away nimbly at the approach
of a candle. Their antennce are remarkably long, slender,
and flexile.
October, 1790. After the servants are gone to bed, the
Htchen hearth swarms with young crickets, and young
1 The -Ptinus peclinicornis is not the only insect that is destructive
to furniture. Various species of Anobium also perforate it in all
directions. Linnaeus's chairs were bored through and destroyed by
A. pertinax; and the Rev. Mr. Kirby had his chairs, his picture-
frames, and the floor of his chamber eatea in every direction by A.
utriatum. —ED.
INSECTS AND VERMES. 345
Blattce molendinarice of all sizes, from the most minute
growth to their full proportions. They seem to live in
a friendly manner together, and not to prey the one on the
other.
August, 1792. After the destruction of many thousands
of Blattce molendinarice , we find that at intervals a fresh de-
tachment of old ones arrives; and particularly during this
hot season : for the windows being left open in the evenings,
the males come flying in at the casements from the neigh-
bouring houses, which swarm with them. How the females,
that seem to have no perfect wings that they can use, can
contrive to get from house to house, does not so readily
appear. These, like many insects, when they find their
present abodes overstocked, have powers of migrating to
fresh quarters. Since the Blattce have been so much kept
under, the crickets have greatly increased in number.
GRYLLUS DOMESTICUS— HOUSE CRICKET.
NOVEMBER. After the servants are gone to bed, the kitchen
hearth swarms with minute crickets not so large as fleas,
which must have been lately hatched. So that these
domestic insects, cherished by the influence of a constant
large fire, regard not the season of their year, but produce
their young at a time when their congeners are either dead,
or laid up for the winter, to pass away the uncomfortable
months in the profoundest slumbers, and a state of torpidity.
When house crickets are out, and running about in a room
in the night, if surprised by a candle, they give two or three
shrill notes, as it were for a signal to their fellows, that they
may escape to their crannies and lurking holes, to avoid
danger.
CIMEX LINEARIS.
AUGUST 12, 1775. Cimiccs linearcs1 are now eagerly pair-
ing on ponds and pools. The females, who vastly exceed
the males in bulk, dart and shoot along on the surface of
the water with the males on their backs. When a female
chooses to be disengaged, she rears, and jumps, and plunges,
1 Ranalra lincaris, FABR.
346 OBSERVATIONS ON
like an unruly colt ; the lover thus dismounted, soon finds
a new mate. The females afterwards retire to another part
of tlie lake, perhaps to deposit their foetus in quiet ; hence
the sexes are found separate, except in the pairing season.
RANATRA LINE ARTS.
Fiom the multitude of minute young- of all gradations of
sizes, these insects seem without doubt to be viviparous.1
PHAL^NA QUERCUS.
MCST of our oaks are naked of leaves, and evtn the Holt in
general, having been ravaged by the caterpillars of a small
Phalceua which is of a pale yellow colour. These insects,
though a feeble race, yet, from their infinite numbers, are
of wonderful effect, being able to destroy the foliage of
1 The egg of the long water-bug has been long known to entomolo-
gists. It is armed at one end by two bristles, and is inserted into the
stem of an aquatic plant, generally of a club rush, in which it is so
deeply imbedded by the lengthened ovipositor of the insect, as to be
entirely hidden from view ; the bristles alone projecting from the place
of concealment. These bristles by preventing the edges of the plant
stem from uniting, secure an exit for the larva, as soon as it is hatched
—ED.
INSECTS AND VE11MES. 347
whole forests and districts. At this season they leave their
aurelia, and issue forth in their fly state, swarming and
covering the trees and hedges.
In a field at Greatham, I saw a flight of swifts busied in
catching their prey near the ground ; and found they were
hawking after these Phalcena. The aurelia of this moth is
shining and black as jet ; and lies wrapped up in a leaf of
the tree, which is rolled round it, and secured at the end a
by a web, to prevent the maggot from falling out.1
EPHEMERA CAUDA TKIESTA — MAY FLY.
JUNE 10, 1771. Myriads of May flies appear for the first
time on the Alresford stream. The air was crowded with
them, and the surface of the water covered. Large trouts
sucked them in as they lay struggling on the surface of the
stream, unable to rise till their wings were dried.
This appearance reconciled me in some measure to the
wonderful account that Scopoli gives of the quantities em erg*
ing from the rivers of Carniola. Their motions are very
peculiar, up and down for many yards almost in a perpendi-
cular line.2
SPHINX OCELLATA.
A VAST insect appears after it is dusk, flying with a humming
noise, and inserting its tongue into the bloom of the honey-
1 I suspect that the insect here meant is not the Phalcena quercus,
but the Phalcena viridata, concerning which, I find the following note
in my "Naturalist's Calendar" for the year 1785 : —
About this time, and for a few days last past, I observed the leaves
of almost all the oak trees in Denn Copse to be eaten and destroyed,
and, on examining more narrowly, saw an infinite number of small
beautiful pale green moths flying about the trees; the leaves of which
that were not quite destroyed were curled up, and withinside were the
exuviae or remains of the chrysalis, from whence I suppose the moths
had issued, and whose caterpillar had eaten the leaves. — MARKWICK.
2 I once saw a swarm of these insects playing up and down over the
surface of a pond in Denn Park, exactly in the manner described by
this accurate naturalist. It was late in the evening of a warm summer's
day when I observed them. — MARKWICK.
348 OBSERVATIONS ON
suckle ; it scarcely settles upon the plants, but feeds on the
wing in the manner of humming birds.1
SPHINX STELLATARUM.
WILD BEE.
THERE is a sort of wild bee frequenting the garden-campion
for the sake of its tomentum, which probably it turns to
some purpose in the business of nidification. It is very
pleasant to see with what address it strips off the pubes,
running from the top to the bottom of a branch, and shav-
ing it bare with all the dexterity of a hoop shaver. When
it has got avast bundle almost as large as itself, it flies away,
holding it secure between its chin and its fore legs.
There is a remarkable hill on the downs near Lewes in
Sussex, known by the name of Mount Carburn, which
overlooks that town, and affords a most engaging prospect
of all the country round, besides several views of the sea.
On the very summit of this exalted promontory, and amidst
the trenches of its Danish camp, there haunts a species of
wild bee, making its nest in the chalky soil."2 When people
1 I have frequently seen the large bee moth (Sphinx stellatarum)
inserting its long tongue or proboscis into the centre of flowers, and
feeding on their nectar, without settling on them, but keeping constantly
on the wing. — MARKWICK.
2 This was probably Bomlms lapidarius. — ED.
INSECTS AND VERMES. 340
approach the place, these insects begin to be alarmed, and
with a sharp and hostile sound, dash and strike round the
heads and faces of intruders. I have been often interrupted
myself while contemplating the grandeur of the scenery
around mo, and have thought myself in danger of being
stung.
WASPS.
WASPS abound in woody wild districts far from neighbour-
hoods ; they feed on ilowers, and catch flies and caterpillars
to carry to their young. Wasps make their nests with the
raspings of sound timber ; hornets, with what they gnaw
from decayed : these particles of wood are kneaded up with
a mixture of saliva from their bodies and moulded into combs.
When there is no fruit in the gardens, wasps eat flies,
and suck the honey from flowers, from ivy blossoms, and
umbellated plants : they carry off also flesh from butchers'
shambles.1
(ESTRUS CURVICAUDA.
THIS insect lays its nits or eggs on horses' legs, flanks, &c.,
each on a single hair. The maggots when hatched do not
enter the horses' skins, but fall to the ground. It seems to
abound most in moist moorish places, though sometimes
seen in the uplands.2
NOSE FLY.
ABOUT the beginning of July, a species of fly (Musca) ob-
tains, which proves very tormenting to horses, trying still
to enter their nostrils and ears, and actually laying their
eggs in the latter of those organs, or perhaps in both.
When these abound, horses in woodland districts become
1 In the year 1775 wasps abounded so prodigiously in this neigh-
bourhood, that, in the month of August, no less than seven or eight
nests were ploughed up in one field : of which there were several
instances, as I was informed.
In the spring, about the beginning of April, a single wasp is some-
times seen, which is of a larger size than usual ; this I imagine is the
queen or female wasp, the mother of the future swarm. — MARK. WICK.
2 See Letter XXXIV. to Pennant, page 107, note 2.— ED.
350 OBSERVATIONS ON
very impatient at their work, continually tossing their heads,
and rubbing their noses on each other, regardless of the
driver, so that accidents often ensue. In the heat of the
day, men are often obliged to desist from ploughing.
Saddle horses are also very troublesome at such seasons.
Country people call this insect the nose fly.1
ICHNEUMON FLY.
1 SAW lately a small ichneumon fly attack a spider much
larger than itself on a grass walk. When the spider made
any resistance, the ichneumon applied her tail to him,
and stung him with great vehemence, so that he soon
became dead and motionless. The ichneumon then run-
ning backward, drew her prey very nimbly over the
walk into the standing grass. This spider would be de-
posited in some hole where the ichneumon would lay some
eggs ; and as soon as the eggs were hatched, the carcass
would afford ready food for the maggots.
Perhaps some eggs might be injected into the body of
the spider, in the act of stinging. Some ichneumons
deposit their eggs in the aurelia of moths and buttei flies.2
1 Is not this insect the CEstrus nasalis of Linnasus, so well described
by Mr. Clark in the third volume of the Linnean Transactions, under
the name of CEstrm veterinus. — MARKWICK.
2 In my " Naturalist's Calendar" for 1795, July 21st, I find the
following note : —
It is not uncommon for some of the species of ichneumon flies to
deposit their eggs in the chrysalis of a butterfly : some time ago I put
two of the chrysalis of a butterfly into a box, and covered it with
gauze, to discover what species of butterfly they would produce; but
instead of a butterfly, one of them produced a number of small ich-
neumon flies.
There are many instances of the great service these little insects are
to mankind in reducing the number of noxious insects, by depositing
their eggs in the soft bodies of their larvce ; but none more remarkable
than that of the Ichneumon tipulce, which pierces the tender body and
deposits its eggs in the larva of the Tipula tritici, \_Cecidomyia tritici,
Kirby — ED.] an insect which, when it abounds greatly, is very pre-
judicial to the grains of wheat. This operation I have frequently seen
it perform with wonder and delight. — MAKKWICK.
INSECTS AND VERMES. 851
BOMBYLIUS MEDIUS.
THE Bomlylius medius is much about in March and the
beginning of April, and soon seems to retire. It is a
hairy insect, like an humblebee, but with only two wings,
and a long straight beak, with which it sucks the early
flowers. The female seems to lay its eggs as it poises on
its wings, by striking its tail on the ground, and against
the grass that stands in its way, in a quick manner, for
several times together.1
MUSCJE — FLIES.
IN the decline of the year, when the mornings and evenings
become chilly, many species of flies (Muscce) retire into
houses, and swarm in the windows.
At first they are very brisk and alert ; but as they grow
more torpid, one cannot help observing that they move
with difficulty, and are scarce able to lift their legs, which
seem as if glued to the glass; and by degrees many do
actually stick on till they die in the place.
It has been observed that divers flies, besides their sharp
hooked nails, have also skinny palms, or flaps to their feet,
whereby they are enabled to stick on glass and other
smooth bodies, and to walk on ceilings with their backs
downward, by means of the pressure of the atmosphere on
those flaps : the weight of which they easily overcome in
warm weather when they are brisk and alert. But in the
decline of the year, this resistance becomes too mighty for
their diminished strength ; and we see flies labouring along,
and lugging their feet in windows, as if they stuck fast to
the glass, and it is with the utmost difficulty they can draw
one foot after another, and disengage their hollow caps
from the slippery surface.
Upon the same principle that flies stick and support
1 I have often seen this insect fly with great velocity, stop on a
sudden, hang in the air in a stationary position for some time, and then
fly off again ; but do not recollect having ever seen it strike its tail
against the ground, or any other substance. — MARKWICK.
352 OBSERVATIONS ON
themselves, do boys, by way of play, carry heavy weights
by only a piece of wet leather at the end of a string clapped
close on the surface of a stone.
TIPULJE, OR EMPIDES.
MAY. Millions of Empides, or Tipulce, come forth at the
close of day, and swarm to such a degree as to fill the air.
At this juncture they sport and copulate ; as it grows more
dark they retire. All day they hide in the hedges. As
they rise in a cloud they appear like smoke.
I do not ever remember to have seen such swarms, except
in the fens of the Isle of Ely. They appear most over
grass grounds.
AUGUST 23. Every ant hill about this time is in a strange
hurry and confusion ; and all the winged ants, agitated by
some violent impulse, are leaving their homes, and, bent on
emigration, swarm by myriads in the air, to the great
emolument of the Hirundines, which fare luxuriously.
Those that escape the swallows return no more to their
nests, but, looking out foi fresh settlements, lay a founda-
tion for future colonies. All the females at this time are
pregnant : the males that escape being eaten wander away
and die.
October 2. Flying ants, male and female, usually swarm
and migrate on hot sunny days in August and September ;
but this day a vast emigration took place in my garden,
and myriads came forth, in appearance, from the drain
which goes under the fruit wall; filling the air and the
adjoining trees and shrubs with their numbers. The
females were full of eggs. This late swarming is probably
owing to the backward, wet season. The day following,
not one flying ant was to be seen.
Horse ants travel home to their nests laden with flies,
which they have caught, and the aureliae of smaller ants,
which they seize by violence.1
1 In my "Naturalist's Calendar" for the year 1777, on September
6th, I find the following note to the article Flying Ants : —
INSECTS AND VERMES. 353
GLOW-WOKMS.
BY observing two glow-worms which were brought from
the field to the bank in the garden, it appeared to us, that
these little creatures put out their lamps between eleven
and twelve, and shine no more for the rest of the night.
Male glow-worms, attracted by the light of the candles,
come into the parlour.
EARTHWORMS.
EARTHWORMS make their casts most in mild weather about-
March and April; they do not lie torpid in winter, but
come forth when there is no frost ; they travel about in
rainy nights, as appears from their sinuous tracks on the
soft muddy soil, perhaps in search of food.
When earthworms lie out a nights on the turf, though
they extend their bodies a great way, they do not quite
leave their holes, but keep the ends of their tails fixed
therein, so that on the least alarm they can retire with
precipitation under the earth. Whatever food falls within
their reach when thus extended, they seem to be content
with, such as blades of grass, straws, fallen leaves, the ends
of which they often draw into their holes; even when
pairing their hinder parts never quit their holes, so that no
two, except they lie within reach of each other's bodies, can
pair ; but as every individual is an hermaphrodite, there is
no difficulty in meeting with a mate, as would be the case
were they of different sexes.
I saw a prodigious swarin of these ants flying about the top of some
tall elm trees close by my house ; some were continually dropping to
the ground as if from the trees, and others rising up from the ground :
many of them were pairing; and I imagine thei' life is but short, for
as soon as produced from the egg by the heat of the sun, they propa-
gate their species, and soon after perish. They were black, somewhat
like the small black ant, and had four wings. I saw also, at another
place, a large sort which were yellowish. On Hie 8th of September,
1785, I again observed the same circumstance of a vast number of
these insects flying near the tops of the elms and dropping to the
ground.
On the 2nd of March, 1777, I saw great numbers of ants come out oi
the ground. — MARKWICK.
A A
354 OBSERVATIONS ON
SNAILS AND SLUGS.
THE shell-less snails called slugs are in motion all the winter
in mild weather, and commit great depredations on garden
plants, and much injure the green wheat, the loss of which
is imputed to earthworms; while the shelled snail, the
QEpsowos, does not come forth at all till about April 10th,
and not only lays itself up pretty early in autumn, in places
secure from frost, but also throws out round the mouth of
its shell a thick operculum formed from its own saliva ; so
that it is perfectly secured, and corked up, as it were, from
all inclemencies. The cause why the slugs are able to
endure the cold so much better than shell snails is, that
their bodies are covered with slime as whales are with
blubber.
Snails pair about Midsummer; and soon after deposit
their eggs in the mould by running their heads and bodies
underground. Hence the way to be rid of them is to kill
as many as possible before they begin to breed.
Large, gray, shell-less cellar snails lay themselves up
about the same time with those that live abroad ; hence it
is plain that a defect of warmth is not the only cause that
influences their retreat.
SNAKES' SLOUGH.
" There the snake throws her enamell'd skin."
SHAKSPEARE, " Mids. Night's Dream." Act ii. sc. 1.
ABOUT the middle of this month (September) we found in a
field near a hedge the slough of a large snake, which seemed
to have been newly cast. From circumstances it appeared
as if turned wrong side outward, and as drawn off back-
ward, like a stocking or woman's glove. Not only the
whole skin, but scales from the very eyes, are peeled off,
and appear in the head of the slough like a pair of spectacles.
The reptile, at the time of changing his coat, had entangled
himself intricately in the grass and weeds, so that the fric-
tion of the stalks and blades might promote this curious
shifting of his exuviae.
" Lubrica serpens
Exuit in spinis vestem." LUCRETIUS.
INSECTS AND VERMES. 355
It would be a most entertaining sight could a person be
an eye-witness to such a feat, and see the snake in the act
of changing his garment. As the convexity of the scales
of the eyes in the slough is now inward, that circumstance
alone is a proof that the skin has been turned : not to men-
tion that now the present inside is much darker than the
outer. If you look through the scales of the snake's eyes
from the concave side, viz. as the reptile used them, they
lessen objects much. Thus it appears from what has been
said, that snakes crawl out of the mouth of their own sloughs,
and quit the tail part last, just as eels are skinned by a
cook maid. "While the scales of the eyes are growing loose,
and a new skin is forming, the creature, in appearance,
must be blind, and feel itself in an awkward uneasy situa-
tion.1
OBSERVATIONS ON VEGETABLES.
TREES, ORDER OF LOSING THEIR LEAVES.
NE of the first trees that becomes naked is
the walnut : the mulberry, the ash, especially
if it bears many keys, and the horse-chest-
nut, come next. All lopped trees, while
their heads are young, carry their leaves a
long while. Apple-trees and peaches remain green till
very late, often till the end of November ; young beeches
never cast their leaves till spring, till the new leaves sprout
1 I have seen many sloughs or skins of snakes entire, after they have
cast them off; and once in particular I remember to have found one of
these sloughs so intricately interwoven amongst some brakes that it was
with difficulty removed without being broken ; this undoubtedly was
done by the creature to assist in getting rid of its incumbrance.
I have great reason to suppose that the eft or common lizard also
casts its skin or slough, but not entire like the snake ; for on the 30th
of March, 1777, I saw one with something ragged hanging to it, which
appeared to be part of its old skin. — MARKWICK.
356 OBSERVATIONS ON
and push them off: in the autumn the beechen leaves turn
of a deep chestnut colour. Tall beeches cast their leaves
about the end of October.
SIZE AND GROWTH.
MR. MARSHAM, of Stratton, near Norwich, informs me by
letter thus : — ft I became a planter early ; so that an oak
which I planted in 1720 is become now, at one foot from
the earth, twelve feet six inches in circumference, and at
fourteen feet (the half of the timber length) is eight feet
two inches. So if the bark was to be measured as timber, the
tree gives one hundred and sixteen and a half feet, buyer's
measure. Perhaps you never heard of a larger oak while
the planter was living. I flatter myself that I increased
the growth by washing the stem, and digging a circle as
far as I supposed the roots to extend, and by spreading
sawdust, &c., as related in the 'Philosophical Transactions.'
I wish I had begun with beeches, (my favourite trees as
well as yours) , I might then have seen very large trees of
my own raising. But I did not begin with beech till 1741,
and then by seed ; so that my largest is now, at five feet
from the ground, six feet three inches in girth, and with its
head spreads a circle of twenty yards diameter. This
tree was also dug round, washed, &c." Stratton, 24 July,
1790.1
The circumference of trees planted by myself, at one foot
from the ground (1790).
Feet. Inches.
Oak in . . . 1730 . 4 5
Ash . . .1730 . 4 6£
Great fir . . .1751 . 5 0
Greatest beech . .1751 . 4 0
Elm . . . 1750 . 5 3
Lime . . . 1756 . 5 5
The great oak in the Holt, which is deemed by Mr.
1 It was at the hospitable seat of his " very worthy and ingenious
friend, Robert Marsham," that Stillingfleet prepared his " Calendar of
Flora for 1755," which has been already referred to. See p. 44. — ED.
VEGETABLES.
357
Marsham to be the biggest in this island, at seven feet
from the ground, measures in circumference thirty- four
feet. It has in old times lost several of its boughs, and is
tending to decay. Mr. Marsham computes, that at four-
THE GRINDSTONE OAK, IN THE ROLT FOREST.
teen feet length this oak contains one thousand feet of
timber.1
It has been the received opinion that trees grow in
1 Mr. Bennett, in a note to this passage, says : — " There are in the
Holt two great oaks ; one known as the Grindstone, and the other as
the Buck's Horn. The former, I apprehend, is the one measured by
Mr. Marsham. At about five feet from the ground its circumference is
fully thirty-six feet. It is now a ruin merely, and destitute altogether
of life : a massive ruin, however, which will resist, through generations
yet to come, the utmost force of the elements." — ED.
358 OBSERVATIONS ON
height only by their annual upper shoot. But my neigh-
bour over the way, whose occupation confines him to one
spot, assures me that trees are expanded and raised in the
lower parts also. The reason that he gives is this: the
point of one of my firs began for the first time to peer over
an opposite roof at the beginning of summer ; but before
the growing season was over, the whole shoot of the year,
and three or four joints of the body beside, became visible
to him as he sits on his form in his shop. According to
this supposition, a tree may advance in height consider-
ably, though the summer shoot should be destroyed every
year.
FLOWING OF SAP.
IF the bough of a vine is cut late in the spring, just before
the shoots push out, it will bleed considerably; but after
the leaf is out, any part may be taken off without the least
inconvenience. So oaks may be barked while the leaf is
budding ; but as soon as they are expanded, the bark will
no longer part from the wood, because the sap that lubri-
cates the bark and makes it part, is evaporated off through
the leaves.
RENOVATION OF LEAVES.
WHEN oaks are quite stripped of their leaves by chafers,
they are clothed again soon after Midsummer with a beautiful
foliage ; but beeches, horse-chestnuts, and maples, once
defaced by those insects, never recover their beauty again
for the whole season.
ASH-TREES.
MANY ash-trees bear loads of keys every year, others never
seem to bear any at all. The prolific ones are naked of
leaves and unsightly; those that are sterile abound in
foliage, and carry their verdure a long while, and are
pleasing objects.
BEECH.
BEECHES love to grow in crowded situations, and will in-
sinuate themselves through the thickest covert, so as to
VEGETABLES. - 359
surmount it all : are therefore proper to mend thin places
in tall hedges.
SYCAMORE.
MAY 12. The sycamore, or great maple, is in bloom, and
at this season makes a beautiful appearance, and affords
much pabulum for bees, smelling strongly like honey. The
foliage of this tree is very fine, and very ornamental to
outlets. All the maples have saccharine juices.
GALLS OF LOMBARDY POPLAR.
THE stalks and ribs of the leaves of the Lombardy poplar
are embossed with large tumours of an oblong shape, which,
by incurious observers, have been taken for the fruit of the
tree. These galls are full of small insects, some of which are
winged, and some not. The parent insect is of the genus
of Cynips. Some poplars in the garden are quite loaded
with these excrescences.
CHESTNUT TIMBER.
JOHN CARPENTER brings home some old chestnut-trees which
are very long ; in several places the wood-peckers had begun
to bore them. The timber and bark of these trees are so
very like oak, as might easily deceive an indifferent ob-
server, but the wood is very shaky, and towards the heart
cup-shaky (that is to say, apt to separate in round pieces
like cups), so that the inward parts are of no use. They
were bought for the purpose of cooperage, but must make
but ordinary barrels, buckets, &c. Chestnut sells for half
the price of oak; but has sometimes been sent into the
king's docks, and passed off instead of oak.
LIME BLOSSOMS.
DR. CHANDLER tells, that in the south of France, an infusion
of the blossoms of the lime-tree (Tilia) is in much esteem
as a remedy for coughs, hoarsenesses, fevers, &c., and that
at Nismes, he saw an avenue of limes that was quite ravaged
and torn in pieces by people greedily gathering the bloom,
which they dried and kept for these purposes.
360 OBSERVATIONS ON
Upon the strength of this information we made some tea
of lime blossoms, and found it a very soft, well flavoured,
pleasant, saccharine julep, in taste much resembling the
juice of liquorice.
BLACKTHORN.
THIS tree usually blossoms while cold north-east winds blow;
so that the harsh rugged weather obtaining at this season is
called by the country people, blackthorn winter.
IVY BERRIES.
IVY berries afford a noble and providential supply for birds
in winter and spring ; for the first severe frost freezes and
spoils all the haws, sometimes by the middle of November ;
ivy berries do not seem to freeze.
HOPS.
THE culture of Virgil's vines corresponded very exactly
with the modern management of hops. I might instance
in the perpetual diggings and hoeings, in the tying to the
stakes and poles, in pruning the superfluous shoots, &c.;
but lately I have observed a new circumstance, which was,
a neighbouring farmer's harrowing between the rows of hops
with a small triangular harrow, drawn by one horse, and
guided by two handles. This occurrence brought to my
mind the following passage : —
ipsa
Fleeter e luctantes inter vineta juvencos."
GEORGIC. II.
Hops are dioecious plants; hence perhaps it might be
proper, though not practised, to leave purposely some male
plants in every garden, that their farina might impregnate
the blossoms. The female plants without their male atten-
dants are not in their natural state : hence we may suppose
the frequent failure of crop so incident to hop-grounds ; no
other growth, cultivated by man, has such frequent and
general failures as hops.
Two hop-gardens much injured by a hailstorm, June 5,
show now (September 2) a prodigious crop, and larger and
VEGETABLES. 361
fairer hops than any in the parish. The owners seem now
to be convinced that the hail, by beating off the tops of the
binds, has increased the side shoots, and improved the crop.
Query therefore, should not the tops of hops be pinched off
when the binds are very gross and strong ?
SEED LYING DORMANT.
THE naked part of the Hanger is now covered with thistles
of various kinds. The seeds of these thistles may have lain
probably under the thick shade of the beeches for many
years, but could not vegetate till the sun and air were
admitted. When old beech- trees are cleared away, the
naked ground in a year or two becomes covered with straw-
berry plants, the seeds of which must have lain in the
ground for an age at least. One of the slidders or trenches
down the middle of the Hanger, close covered over with
lofty beeches near a century old, is still called Strawberry
Slidder, though no strawberries have grown there in the
memory of man. That sort of fruit, did once, no doubt,
abound there, and will again when the obstruction is re-
moved.
BEANS SOWN BY BIRDS.
MANY horsebeans sprang up in my field- walks in the autumn,
and are now grown to a considerable height. As the Ewel
was in beans last summer, it is most likely that these seeds
came from thence ; but then the distance is too consider-
able for them to have been conveyed by mice. It is most
probable therefore that they were brought by birds, and
in particular by jays and pies, who seem to have hid them
among the grass and moss, and then to have forgotten
where they had stowed them. Some pease are also growing
in the same situation, and probably under the same cir-
cumstances.
CUCUMBERS SET BY BEES.
IP bees, who are much the best setters of cucumbers, do not
happen to take kindly to the frames, the best way is to
tempt them by a little honey put on the male and female
362 OBSERVATIONS ON
bloom. When they are once induced to haunt the frames,
they set all the fruit, and wiU hover with impatience round
the lights in a morning, till the glasses are opened. Pro-
batum est.
WHEAT.
A NOTION has always obtained, that in England hot summers
are productive of fine crops of wheat; yet in the years 1780
and 1781, though the heat was intense, the wheat was much
mildewed, and the crop light. Does not severe heat, while
the straw is milky, occasion its juices to exude, which being
extravasated, occasion spots, discolour the stems and blades,
and injure the health of the plants ?
TRUFFLES.
AUGUST. A truffle-hunter called on us, having in his pocket
several large truffles found in this neighbourhood. He
says these roots are not to be found in deep woods, but in
narrow hedge-rows and the skirts of coppices. Some truffles,
he informed us, lie two feet within the earth, and some quite
on the surface ; the latter, he added, have little or no smell,
and are not so easily discovered by the dogs as those that
lie deeper. Half-a- crown a pound was the price which he
asked for this commodity.
Truffles never abound in wet winters and springs. They
are in season, in different situations, at least nine months in
the year.
TREMELLA NOSTOC.
THOUGH the weather may have been ever so dry and burning,
yet after two or three wet days, this jelly like substance
abounds on the walks.
FAIRY RINGS.
THE cause, occasion, call it what you will, of fairy rings,
subsists in the turf, and is conveyable with it; for the turf
of my garden- walks, brought from the down above, abounds
with those appearances, which vary their shape, and shift
situation continually, discovering themselves now in circles,
VEGETABLES. 363
now in segments, and sometimes in irregular patches and
spots. Wherever they obtain, puff balls abound ; the seeds
of which were doubtless brought in the turf.
METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS.
BAKOMETER.
OVEMBER 22, 1768. A remarkable fall of
the barometer all over the kingdom. At
Selborne we had no wind, and not much
rain; only vast, swagging, rocklike clouds
appeared at a distance.
PARTIAL FROST.
THE country people, who are abroad in winter mornings
long before sunrise, talk much of hard frost in some spots,
and none in others. The reason of these partial frosts is
obvious, for there are at such times partial fogs about ;
where the fog obtains, little or no frost appears, but where
the air is clear, there it freezes hard. So the frost takes
place either on hill or in dale, wherever the air happens to
be clearest and freest from vapour.
THAW.
THAWS are sometimes surprisingly quick, considering the
small quantity of rain. Does not the warmth at such times
come from below ? The cold in still, severe seasons seems
to come down from above, for the coming over of a cloud
in severe nights raises the thermometer abroad at once full
ten degrees. The first notices of thaws often seem to
appear in vaults, cellars, &c.
If a frost happens, even when the ground is considerably
dry, as soon as a thaw takes place, the paths and fields are
all in a batter. Country people say that the frost draws
moisture. But the true philosophy is, that the steam and
vapours continually ascending from the earth, are bound in
by the frost, and not suffered to escape till released by the
364 METEOROLOGICAL
thaw. No wonder then that the surface is all in a float ;
since the quantity of moisture by evaporation that arises
daily from every acre of ground is astonishing.
FROZEN SLEET.
JANUARY 20. Mr. H.'s man says, that he caught this day,
in a lane near Hackwood Park, many rooks, which, attempt-
ing to fly, fell from the trees with their wings frozen
together by the sleet, that froze as it fell. There were,
he affirms, many dozen so disabled.
MIST, CALLED LONDON SMOKE.
THIS is a blue mist which has somewhat the smell of coal-
smoke, and as it always comes to us with a north-east wind,
is supposed to come from London. It has a strong smell,
and is supposed to occasion blights. When such mists
appear they are usually followed by dry weather.
REFLECTION OF FOG.
WHEN people walk in a deep white fog by nightwith a lanthorn,
if they will turn their backs to the light, they will see their
shades impressed on the fog in rude gigantic proportions.
This phenomenon seems not to have been attended to, but
implies the great density of the meteor at that juncture.
HONEYDEW.
JUNE 4, 1783. Vast honeydews this week. The reason of
these seems to be, that in hot days the effluvia of flowers
are drawn up by a brisk evaporation, and then in the night
fall down with the dews with which they are entangled.1
This clammy substance is very grateful to bees, who
gather it with great assiduity, but it is injurious to the trees
on which it happens to fall, by stopping the pores of the
leaves. The greatest quantity falls in still close weather ;
1 The nature of honeydew has been already referred to in Letter
LXIV. to Daines Barrington, and the above explanation shown to be
erroneous. See p. 310 and note. — ED.
OBSERVATIONS. 365
because winds disperse it, and copious dews dilute it, and
prevent its ill effects. It falls mostly in hazy warm
weather.
MORNING CLOUDS.
AFTER a bright night and vast dew, the sky usually becomes
cloudy by eleven or twelve o'clock in the forenoon, and
clear again towards the decline of the day. The reason
seems to be, that the dew, drawn up by evaporation, occa-
sions the clouds ; which, towards evening, being no longer
rendered buoyant by the warmth of the sun, melt away,
and fall down again in dews. If clouds are watched in a
still warm evening, they will be seen to melt away, and
disappear.
DRIPPING WEATHER AFTER DROUGHT.
No one that has not attended to such matters, and taken
down remarks, can be aware how much ten days' dripping
weather will influence the growth of grass or corn after a
severe dry season. This present summer, 1776, yielded a
remarkable instance; for till the 30th of May the fields
were burnt up and naked, and the barley not half out of the
ground ; but now, June 10, there is an agreeable prospect
of plenty.
AURORA BOREALIS.
NOVEMBER 1, 1787. The Northern Aurora made a par-
ticular appearance, forming itself into a broad, red, fiery
belt, which extended from E. to W. across the welkin; but
the moon rising at about ten o'clock, in unclouded majesty
in the E., put an end to this grand, but awful meteorous
phenomenon.
BLACK SPRING, 1771.
DR. JOHNSON says, that " in 1771 the season was so severe
in the island of Skye, that it is remembered by the name of
the Black Spring. The snow, which seldom lies at all,
covered the ground fc^ eight weeks, many cattle died, and
those that survived we/e so emaciated that they did not
366 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS.
require the male at the usual season." The case was just
the same with us here in the south ; never were so many
barren cows known as in the spring following that dreadful
period. Whole dairies missed being in calf together.
At the end of March the face of the earth was naked to a
surprising degree. Wheat hardly to be seen, and no signs
of any grass; turnips all gone, and sheep in a starving
way. All provisions rising in price. Farmers cannot sow
for want of rain.
SUMMARY OF THE WEATHER.
i
O
01
t^
o
00
iO
*o
^
CM
O
iO
1
!>.
CM
CO
Ci
CO
iO
6
§
CO
CO
CO
CO
CO
CO
CO
CM
CM
CM
Tf
CM
CO
^
T*
no
^
d
M.
rH
O
o
co
o
CM
o
CO
o
CO
CM
CM
•0
-tf
OS
CO
0
i — i
p
0
r^
CO
^
10
O
-r
'O
-^
CM
>
o
1— 1
10
0
o
!>.
c^ a
CM ex
D 05
3 O
CO
CO
r^
0
iO
Ci
CO
—
iO
CO
fc
•4-a
w
CM
CO
o
CO
r~
^
Oi
CO
CM T
CM C
P ^
P ^
5 0
o
o
0
CO
^
0
CO
O
r— 1
00
C5
"T
1 — 1
»o
0
o
+3
a,
CM
D^
i — i
CM
i-O
0
10
iO ^
Oi i>
i JO
^ CO
- iO
0
I— 1
D^
iO
CM
00
CM
CO
CO
*0
CO
t^
iO
CO
iO
A
CO
10
CM
iO ^
h rH
iO
CM
O
i — !
iO
so
p
00
CM
^
CM
CO
CO
rH T;
CM &
H CO
5 00
CM
CM
0
0
0
CO
CO
!>.
iO
CM
^
00
CM
CO
CO T
F» 0
CO
o
CM
1 — 1
-*
J>%
'•3
0
0
»-0
^
5
O O
CO C
i CO
i iO
00
)O
Ci
CO
•<?
CM
CO
iO
CO
i— i
t§
D^
1 — 1
CM
CO i-
H CO
CO
CO
CO
iO
0
o
c
10
£>•
CM
CO
»o
0
Oi C
CO O
> o
1 iO
c^
CM
"T<
CM
CO
C5
CO
c^
1-5
i— I
CM
CO
i — 1 r-
- r— 1
T— I
"tf
o
o
CM
fr
^
CO
^
00
CM
iO
0 C
CO ^N
5 0
i CO
CO
D>-
O
0
CO
CO
CO
CO
O
0
i — I
CM
S
CO
CM
r— 1
O 0
1 CM
O
Tf
^
^
CO
^
T
c-
!>.
xO
00
CO
CM
0
t^ r-
T-l CX.
•i -*
5 r^
CO
r— 1
00
-^
co
CO
r—t
00
o
Gi
i— i
«!
~^c~
^
^
1C
o
0
CO
CM
00
O i-
0 0
CO C£
H O
3 00
5 CM
o
1 — 1
CO
r^
^
CO
"^"
Gi
>0
^F"
0
t^
CO
00
CO
s
CO
CM
CO
O i-
H ^
T—t
CM
o
i — i
CO
CO
j£
a>
CO
OS
^
iO
r^
j>.
0 <>
00 rj
J t^
i o
t^
CO
^
Ci
^
^?
0
CO
CO
CM
CO
fe
r- 1
iO
o
1 — 1 r-
H CO
CO
^
o
4}i
rH
CM
S
•^
co
3
CO
^? r-
00 O
•I 00
i CO
0
CO
00
~*
0
Oi
co
i^
1^-
0
t^
1-5
^
-^
CO
CM C£
"> O
1— 1
^
n
0
CO
CO
h
•
O
>
CM
CO
r^.
CO
00
1^
^
CO
I>-
iO C£
oo a
t>. t>
5 r^
) CO
. t^
00
CO
L^
c:
oo
I-
0
0
E^
r— <
O
t>.
C\J
Ci
L^
CO
o
!>.
® .2 >%
5 si
111
** "S o c
JM-SH
o
^r
III
C C3 ^
^ gl
'i
W r— W
all
(|11
M^l
« « oa 'O
1 11s
Hii
eS ^3 ^ e
a, g-3-S
| i1|
^'o I I
« Kl0'9
« >l e
I^S I
•J£*
1 1 .s <s-
.5 2 "S .5
3 '-a I a
^ i 5 g
"S R » ^
3.g^ gj
r3 I" ..- 5
|«|5
^ 1 f. S
^1
i5 g
.25-5
SUMMARY OF THE WEATHER.
1768.
EGINS with a fortnight's frost and snow.
Kainy during February. Cold and wet
spring. Wet season from the beginning of
June to the end of harvest. Latter end of
September foggy, without rain. All Octo-
ber and the first part of November rainy ; and thence to the
end of the year alternate rains and frosts,
1769. January and February, frosty and rainy, with
gleams of fine weather in the intervals. To the middle of
March, wind and rain : to the end of March, dry and windy.
To the middle of April, stormy with rain. To the end of
June, fine weather, with rain. To the beginning of August,
warm, dry weather. To the end of September, rainy, with
short intervals of fine weather. To the latter end of Octo-
ber, frosty mornings, with fine days. The next fortnight
rainy; thence to the end of November dry and frosty.
December, windy, with rain and intervals of frost, and the
first fortnight very foggy.
1770. Frost for the first fortnight: during the 14th
and 15th all the snow melted. To the end of February,
mild, hazy weather. The whole of March frosty, with bright
weather. April cloudy, with rain and snow. May began
with summer showers, and ended with dark cold rains.
June, rainy, chequered with gleams of sunshine. The first
fortnight in July, dark and sultry ; the latter part of the
month, heavy rain. August, September, and the first fort-
B B
370 SUMMARY OF
night in October, in general fine weather, though with
frequent interruptions of rain; from the middle of October
to the end of the year, almost incessant rains.
1771. Severe frost till the last week in January. To the
first week in February, rain and snow; to the end of
February, spring weather. To the end of the third week
in April, frosty weather. To the end of the first fortnight
in May, spring weather, with copious showers. To the end
of June, dry, warm weather. The first fortnight in July,
warm, rainy , weather. To the end of September, warm
weather, but in general cloudy, with showers. October,
rainy. November, frost, with intervals of fog and rain.
December, in general bright, mild weather, with hoar frosts.
1772. To the end of the first week in Fjbruary, frost
and snow. To the end of the first fortnight in March, frost,
eleet, rain, and snow. To the middle of April, cold rains.
To the middle of May, dry weather, with cold piercing
winds. To the end of the first week in June, cool showers.
To the middle of August, hot, dry summer weather. To
the end of September, rain, with storms and thunder. To
December 22, rain, with mild weather. December 23, the
first ice. To the end of the month, cold, foggy weather.
1773. The first week in January, frost; thence to the
end of the month, dark rainy weather. The first fortnight
in February, hard frost. To the end of the first week in
March, misty, showery weather ; bright spring days to the
close of the month. Frequent showers to the latter end of
April. To the end of June, warm showers, with intervals
of sunshine. To the end of August, dry weather, with a few
days of rain. To the end of the first fortnight in November,
rainy. The next four weeks, frost ; and thence to the end
of the year, rainy.
1774. Frost and rain to the end of the first fortnight in
March ; thence to the end of the month, dry weather. To
the 15th of April, showers; thence to the end of April, fine
spring days. During May, showers and sunshine in about
an equal proportion. Dark, rainy weather to the end of the
third week in July; thence to the 24th of August, sultry,
with thunder and occasional showers. To the end of the
THE WEATHER. 371
third week in November, rain, with frequent intervals of
sunny weather. To the end of December, dark, dripping fogs.
1775. To the end of the first fortnight in March, rain
almost every day. To the first week in April, cold winds
with showers of rain and snow. To the end of June, warm,
bright weather, with frequent showers. The first fortnight
in July, almost incessant rains. To the 26th of August,
sultry weather, with frequent showers. To the end of the
third week in September, rain, with a few intervals of fine
weather. To the end of the year, rain, with intervals of
hoar-frost and sunshine.
1776. To January 24, dark, frosty weather, with much
snow. March 24, to the end of the month, foggy, with
hoar-frost. To the 30th of May, dry, dark, harsh weather,
with cold winds. To the end of the first fortnight in July,
warm, with much rain. To the end of the first week in
August hot and dry, with intervals of thunder showers. To
the end of October, in general fine seasonable weather, with
a considerable proportion of rain. To the end of the year,
dry frosty weather, with some days of hard rain.
1777. To the 10th of January, hard frost: to the 20th
of January, foggy, with frequent showers. To the 18th of
February, hard, dry frost, with snow. To the end of
May, heavy showers, with intervals of warm, dry, spring
days. To the 8th of July, dark, with heavy rain : to the
18th of July, dry, warm weather: to the end of July, very
heavy rains. To the 12th of October, remarkably fine,
warm weather. To the end of the year, gray, mild
weather, with but little rain, and still less frost.
1778. To the 13th of January, frost, with a little snow:
to the 24th of January, rain : to the 30th, hard frost. To
the 23rd of February, dark, harsh, foggy weather, with
rain : to the end of the month, hard frost with snow. To
the end of the first fortnight in March, dark, harsh
weather. From the 1st, to the end of the first fortnight
in April, spring weather : to the end of the month, snow
and ice. To the llth of June, cool, with heavy showers.
To the 19th of July, hot, sultry, parching weather: to the
end of the month, heavy showers. To the end of Sep-
372 SUMMARY OF
tember, dry warm weather. To the end of the year, wet,
with considerable intervals of sunshine.
1779. Frost and showers to the end of January. To
the 21st of April, warm, dry weather. To the 8th of May,
rainy. To the 7th of June, dry and warm. To the 6th
of July, hot weather, with frequent rain: to the 18th of
July, dry, hot weather. To August 8, hot weather, with
frequent rains: to the end of August, fine dry harvest
weather. To the end of November, fine autumnal weather,
with intervals of rain. To the end of the year, rain, with
frost and snow.
1780. To the end of January, frost. To the end of
February, dark, harsh weather, with frequent intervals of
frost. To the end of March, warm, showery, spring
weather. To the end of April, dark, harsh weather, with
rain and frost. To the end of the first fortnight in May,
mild, with rain. To the end of August, rain, and fair
weather in pretty equal proportions. To the end of
October, fine autumnal weather, with intervals of rain. To
the 24th of November, frost. To December 16, mild, dry,
foggy weather. To the end of the year, frost and snow.
1781. To January 25, frost and snow. To the end of
February, harsh and windy, with rain and snow. To
April 5, cold, drying winds. To the end of May, mild,
spring weather, with a few light showers. June began
with heavy rain, but thence to the end of October, dry
weather, with a few flying showers. To the end of the
year, open weather, with frequent rains.
1782. To February 4, open, mild weather : to February
22, hard frost. To the end of March, cold, blowing
weather, with frost and snow and rain. To May 7, cold,
dark rains ; to the end of May, mild, with incessant rains.
To the end of June, warm and dry. To the end of August,
warm, with almost perpetual rains. The first fortnight in
September, mild and dry ; thence to the end of the month,
rain. To the end of October, mild, with frequent showers.
November began with hard frost, and continued throughout
with alternate frost and thaw. The first part of December
frosty : the latter part mild.
THE WEATHER. 373
1783. To January 16, rainy, with heavy winds: to the
24th, hard frost. To the end of the first fortnight in
February, blowing, with much rain. To the end of
February, stormy, dripping weather. To the 9th of May,
cold, harsh winds (thick ice on the 5th of May) . To the
end of August, hot weather with frequent showers. To
the 23rd of September, mild, with heavy driving rains.
To November 12, dry, mild weather. To the 18th of
December, gray, soft weather, with a few showers. To
the end of the year, hard frost.
1784. To February 19, hard frost, with two thaws;
one, the 14th of January, the other, the 5th of February : to
February 28, mild, wet fogs. To the 3rd of March, frost,
with ice : to March 10, sleet and snow. To April 2, snow
and hard frost : to April 27, mild weather, with much rain.
To May 12, cold, drying winds: to May 20, hot, cloudless
weather. To June 27, warm, with frequent showers. To
July 18, hot and dry. To the end of August, warm with heavy
rains. To November 6, clear, mild, autumnal weather,
except a few days of rain at the latter end of September.
To the end of the year, fog, rain, and hard frost (on
December 10, the therm. 1 deg. below 0.)
1785. A thaw began on the 2nd of January, and rainy
weather with wind continued to January 28. To the 15th
of March, very hard frost: to the 21st of March, mild,
with sprinkling showers. To April 7, hard frost. To May
17, mild, windy weather, without a drop of rain: to the
end of May, cold, with a few showers. To June 9, mild
weather, with frequent soft showers. To July 13, hot, dry
weather, with a few showery intervals : to July 22, heavy
rain. To the end of September, warm, with frequent
showers. To the end of October, frequent rain. To the
18th of November, dry, mild weather. (Haymaking
finished November 9, and the wheat harvest November 14.)
To December 23, rain. To the end of the year hard frost.
1786. To the 7th of January, frost and snow; to January
13, mild, with much rain: to the 21st of January, deep
snow. To February 11, mild, with frequent rains; to the
21st of February, dry, with high winds. To the 10th of
374 SUMMARY OF
March, hard frost. To the 13th of April, wet with intervals
of frost ; to the end of April, dry, mild weather. On the
1st and 2nd of May, thick ice; to the 10th of May, heavy
rain. To June 14, fine, warm, dry weather. From the 8th
to the llth of July heavy showers. To October 13, warm,
with frequent showers; to October 19, ice; to October 24,
mild, pleasant weather. To November 3, frost. To
December 16, rain, with a few detached days of frost. To
the end of the year, frost and snow.
1787. To January 24, dark, moist, mild weather: to Ja-
nuary 28, frost and snow. To February 16, mild, showery
weather; to February 28, dry, cool weather. To March
10, stormy, with driving rain ; to March 24, bright, frosty
weather. To the end of April, mild, with frequent rain.
To May 22, fine bright weather. To the end of June,
mostly warm, with frequent showers (on June 7, ice as
thick as a crown piece). To the end of July, hot and
sultry, with copious rain. To the end of September, hot
dry weather, with occasional showers. To November 23,
mild, with light frosts and rain ; to the end of November,
hard frost. To December 21, still and mild, with rain. To
the end of the year, frost.
1788. To January 13, mild and wet; to January 18,
frost ; to the end of the month, dry, windy weather. To
the end of February, frosty, with frequent showers. To
March 14, hard frost ; to the end of March, dark, harsh
weather, with frequent showers. To April 4, windy, with
showers. To the end of May, bright, dry, warm weather,
with a few occasional showers. From June 28 to July 17,
heavy rains. To August 12, hot, dry weather. To the
end of September, alternate showers and sunshine. To
November 22, dry, cool weather. To the end of the year,
hard frost.
1789. To January 13, hard frost ; to the end of the month,
mild, with showers. To the end of February, frequent rain,
with snow showers and heavy gales of wind. To the 13th
of March, hard frost, with snow. To April 18, heavy rain,
with frost and snow and sleet ; to the end of April, dark,
cold weather, with frequent rains. To June 9, warm, spring
TEE WEATHER. 375
weather, with brisk winds and frequent showers ; from June
4 to the end of July, warm, with much rain. To August
29, hot, dry, sultry weather. To September 11, mild, with
frequent showers ; to the end of September, fine autumnal
weather, with occasional showers. To November 17,
heavy rain, with violent gales of wind. To December 18,
mild, dry weather, with a few showers. To the end of
the year rain and wind.
1790. To January 16, mild, foggy weather, with
occasional rains; to January 21, frost; to January 28,
dark, with driving rains. To February 14, mild, dry wea-
ther; to February 22, hard frost. To April 5, bright,
cold weather, with a few showers; to April 15, dark and
harsh, with a deep snow ; to April 21, cold, cloudy weather,
with ice. To June 6, mild spring weather, with much
rain. From July 3 to July 14, cool, with heavy rain ; to
the end of July, warm, dry weather. To August 6, cold,
with wind and rain : to August 24, fine harvest weather.
To September 5, strong gales, with driving showers. To
November 26, mild autumnal weather, with frequent
showers. To December 1, hard frost and snow. To the
end of the year, rain and snow, and a few days of frost.
1791. To the end of January, mild, with heavy rains.
To the end of February, windy, with much rain and snow.
From March to the end of June, mostly dry, especially
June ; (March and April, rather cold and frosty, May and
June hot) . July, rainy. Fine harvest weather, and pretty
dry, to the end of September. Wet October, and cold to-
wards the end. Very wet and stormy in November. Much
frost in December.
1792. Some hard frost in January, but mostly wet and
mild. February, some hard frost and a little snow. March,
wet and cold. April, great storms on the 13th, then some
very warm weather. May and June, cold and dry. July,
wet and cool; indifferent harvest, rather late and wet.
September, windy and wet. October, showery and mild.
November, dry and fine. December, mild.
A NATURALIST'S CALENDAR:
WITH OBSERVATIONS IN VARIOUS BRANCHES
OF NATURAL HISTORY.
EXTRACTED FROM THE PAPERS OF THE
REV. GILBERT WHITE;
BY JOHN AIKIN, M.D.
WITH REMARKS BY MR. MARKWICK AND OTHERS.
Dli. AIKIN'S ADVERTISEMENT.
HE Rev. Mr. White, so agreeably known to
the public by his Natural History of Selborne,
left behind him a series of yearly books, con-
taining his diurnal observations on the occur-
rences in the various walks of rural nature,
from the year 1768 to the time of his death in 1793. From
these annals he had already extracted all the matter com-
prised in the work abovementioned, down to the middle of
1787; but several curious facts in the preceding numbers
had not been thus employed ; and all the subsequent ones
remained untouched. It was thought a mark of respect
due to his memory, and to the reputation he had acquired
as a faithful and elegant observer, not to consign these relics
to neglect. The manuscripts were accordingly put into
my hands for the purpose of selecting from them what
might seem worthy of laying before the public. The pre-
sent small publication is the fruit of my research. With
no small pains I collected the materials of it, dispersed
through the records of so many years, and gave them such
an arrangement as I thought would present them in the
most agreeable and useful manner to the lovers of natural
knowledge.1
J. AIKIN.
LONDON, Jan. 1, 1795.
1 The "Natural History of Selborne" and the " Naturalist's Calendar "
are singularly connected. In the last paragraph of the former work,
Gilbert White announces that he had proposed to have added a Natural
History of the Twelve Months of the Year, and that a main induce-
380 DR. A I KIN'S ADVERTISEMENT.
ment to him to forego his intention had been the publication by Dr.
Aikin of somewhat of the same kind : the commencement of the
Naturalist's Calendar is a Preface by Dr. Aikin himself, explanatory of
his part in the preparation of such a work from the materials left by
Gilbert White!— ED.
THE NATURALIST'S CALENDAR,
AS KEPT AT SELBORNE, IN HAMPSHIRE,
FROM THE YEAR 1768 TO THE YEAR 1793.
BY THE KEV. GILBERT WHITE, M.A.
TO WHICH ARE APPENDED, PARALLEL OBSERVATIONS MADE
AT CATSFIELD, NEAR BATTLE, IN SUSSEX.
BY WILLIAM MAKKWICK, ESQ. F.L.S.
PREFACE TO THE NATURALIST'S
CALENDAR.
HE mode in winch the following rural Calendar
of the year has been composed, was to copy
out from the Journals all the circumstances
thought worthy of noting, with the several
dates of their recurrence, and to preserve the
earliest and latest of those dates ; so that the Calendar ex-
hibits the extreme range of variation in the first occurrence
of all the phenomena mentioned. To many of them only
one date is annexed, only one observation having been
entered. This is particularly the case with respect to the
flowering of plants, with which the book of 1768 alone was
copiously filled ; and it is to be noted that this was rather a
backward year. — [J. A.]
[In the preface to the edition of the Natural History
published in 1802 it is stated that
A very valuable addition to the Calendar and Observa-
tions has been obtained from the kindness of William
Markwick, Esq., F.L.S., well known as an accurate ob-
server of nature; whose parallel calendar, kept in the
county of Sussex, is given upon the opposite columns.]
COMPARATIVE VIEW
OF
WHITE'S AND MARKWICK'S CALENDARS.
Of the abbreviations used, fl. signifies flowering; I. leafing ; and ap. the
first appearance.
REDBREAST (Sylvia rubecula) whis-
tles
Larks (Alauda arvensis} congregate
Nuthatch (Sitta ccesia) chatters
Winter aconite (Helleborushiemalis)
fl.
Shelless snail or slug (Limax) ap.
Gray wagtail (Motacilla boaruld) "|
ap. I
White wagtail (Motacilla alba) ap. J
Missel thrush (Turdus viscivorus)
sings
Bearsfoot (Helleborus fcetidus) fl.
Polyanthus (Primula polyantha) fl.
Double daisy (Bellis perennis plena)
fl.
Mezereon (Daphne mezereum) fl.
Pansy ( Viola tricolor) fl.
Red dead-nettle (Lamium purpu-
reum) fl.
Groundsel (Senecio vulgaris) fl.
Hazel (Corylus avelland) catkins
open
Hepatica (Anemone hepatica') fl.
Hedge sparrow (Sylvia modularis)
whistles
Common flies (Musca domesticd)
seen in windows
C C
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
Jan. 1 — 12
Jan. 1—18
[Oct. 6
Jan. 3 — 31 : and again
Oct. 16. Feb. 9
Jan. 1 — 14
Mar. 3.
Apr. 10
Jan. 1. Feb. 18
Jan. 2
Feb. 28.
Jan. 16.
Apr. 17
May 31
Jan. 2— 11 |
Jan. 24.
Dec. 12.
Mar. 26
Feb. 23
Jan. 2—14
Jan. 2. .Feb 14
Jan. 2. Apr. 12
Feb. 19.
Mar. 1.
Jan. 1.
Apr. 14
May 5
Apr. 9
Jan. 2. Feb. 1
Jan. 3. Feb. 16
Jan. 3
Mar. 17.
Jan. 2.
Jan. 1.
Apr. 29
Apr. 4
May 10
Jan. 3—21
Jan. 3 — 15
Jan. 1.
Jan. 1.
Apr. 5
Apr. 9
Jan. 3. Feb. 28
Jan. 21.
Mar. 11, fl.
Jan. 4. Feb. 18
Jan. 17.
Apr. 9
Jan. 5—12
Jan. 16.
Mar. 13
Jan. 5. Feb. 3
May 15
386
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
Greater titmouse (Parus major)
makes its spring note
Jan. 6. Feb. 6
Feb. 17. Mar. 17
Thrush (Turdus musicus) sings
Jan. 6—22
Jan. 15. Apr. 4
Insects swarm under sunny hedges
Jan. 6
Primrose (Primula vulgaris) fl.
Jan. 6. Apr. 7
Jan. 3. Mar. 22
Bees (Apis mellificd) come out of
[seen Dec. 30
their hives
Jan. 6. Mar. 19
Jan. 31. Apr. 11: last
Gnats play about
Jan. 6. Feb. 3
Hen chaffinches (Fringilla ccelebs)
Jan. 6- 11
Dec. 2. Feb. 3, male
flock
and female seen in
equal numbers
Furze or gorse ( Ulex europcsus) fl.
Jan. 8. Feb. 1
Jan. 1. Mar. 27
Wall-flower (Cheiranthus cheiri ; seu
fruticulosus of Smith) fl.
Jan. 8. Apr. 1
Feb. 21. May 9
Stock (Cheiranthus incanus) fl.
Jan. 8—12
Feb. 1. June 3
Snow Bunting (Emberiza nivalis)
in great flocks
Jan. 9
Linnets (Fringilla linota) congre-
gate in vast flocks
Jan. 9
Jan. 11
Lambs begin to fall
Jan. 9—11
Jan. 6. Feb. 21
Rooks (Corvus frugilegus) resort to
their nest trees
Jan. 10. Feb. 11
Jan. 23
Black Hellebore(JHre//eZ>0rMs niger) fl.
Jan. 10
Apr. 27
Snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis) fl.
Jan. 10. Feb. 5
Jan. 18. Mar 1
White dead-nettle (Lamium alburn^)
fl.
Jan. 13
Mar 23. May 10
Trumpet honeysuckle fl.
Jan. 13
Common creeping crow-foot (Ranun-
culus repens) fl.
Jan. 13
Apr. 10. May 12
House sparrow (Fringilla domesticd)
chirps
Jan. 14
Feb. 17. May 9
Dandelion (Leontodon taraxacum) fl.
Jan. 16. Mar. 11
Feb. 1. Apr. 17
Bat ( Vespertilio) ap.
Jan. 16. Mar. 24
Feb. 6. June 1 : last
Spiders shoot their webs
Jan. 16
[seen Nov. 20
Butterfly ap.
Jan. 16
Feb. 21. May 8: last
Brambling (Fringilla montifringilld)
[seen Dec. 22
ap.
Jan. 16
Jan. 10—31
Blackbird (Turdus meruld) whistles
Jan. 17
Feb. 15. May 13
Wren (Sylvia troglodytes) sings
Jan. 17
Feb. 7. June 12
Earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris)
lie out
Jan. 18. Feb. 8
Crocus (Crocus vernus) fl.
Jan. 18. Mar. 18
Jan. 20. Mar. 19
Skylark (Alauda arvensis) sings
Jan. 21
Jan. 12. Feb. 27: sings
Ivy (Hedera helix) casts its leaves
Jan. 22
[till Nov. 13
He.lleborus hiemalis fl.
Jan. 22—24
Feb. 28. Apr. 17
Common dor or clock beetle (Scara
baus stercorariuti) ap.
Jan. 23 Feb. 12. Apr. 19: last
[seen Nov. 24
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
387
Peziza acetdbnlum ap.
Helleborus viridis fl.
Hazel (Corylus avellana) shows its
female blossoms
Woodlark (Alauda arbor ed) sings
Chaffinch (Fringilla ccelebs) sings
Jackdaw (Corvus moneduld) begins
to come to churches
Yellow wagtail (Motacilla flava) ap.
Honeysuckle (Lonicera perictyme-
num) 1.
Field or procumbent speedwell ( Ve-
ronica agrestis) fl.
Small tortoise-shell butterfly (Papi-
lio urticcB) ap.
White wagtail (Motacilla alba) sings
Wood snail (Helix nemoralis) ap.
Earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris)
engender
Barren strawberry (Fragaria ste-
. rilis) fl.
Tomtit (Parus cceruleus) makes its
spring note
Brown wood owl (Strix aluco)
hoots
Hen sits
Marsh titmouse (Parus palustris}
begins his two harsh sharp notes
Gossamer floats
Musca tenax ap.
Laurustine (Viburnum tinus) fl.
Butcher's broom (Ruscus aculeatus)
fl.
Fox (Canis vulpes) smells rank
Turkey cock struts and gobbles
Yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella)
sings
Brimstone butterfly (Papilio rhamni)
ap.
Green woodpecker (Picus viridis)
laughs
Raven (Corvus cor ax) builds
Male yew tree (Taxus baccatd)
sheds its farina
Coltsfoot (Tussilago farfard) fl.
Rooks (Corvus frugilegus) build
Partridges (Perdix cinered) pair
Peas (Pisum sativum) sown
WHITE.
MARKWJCK.
Jan. 23
Jan. 23. Mar. 5
Jan. 23. Feb. 1
Jan. 27. Mar. 11, fl.
Jan. 24. Feb. 21
Jan. 28. Jnne 5
Jan. 24. Feb. 15
Jan. 21. Feb. 26
Jan. 25. Mar. 4
Jan. 25. Apr. 14 Apr. 13. July 3 : last
[seen Sept. fc
Jan. 25
Jan. 1. Apr. 9
Jan. 27. Mar. 15
Feb. 12. Mar. 29
[seen June 6
Jan. 27. Apr. 2
Mar. 5. Apr. 24: last
Jan. 28
Mar. 16
Jan. 28. Feb. 24
Apr. 2. June .1 1
Jan. 30
Feb. 1. Mar. 26
Jan. 13. Mar. 26
Feb. 1
Apr. 27
Feb. 2
Feb. 3
Mar. 8, hatches
Feb. 3
Feb. 4. Apr. 1
Feb. 4. Apr. 8
Feb. 5
Jan. 1. Apr. 5
Feb. 5
Jan. 1. May 10
Feb. 7
May 19: young brought
Feb. 10
[forth
Feb. 12
Feb. 18. Apr. 28
Feb. 13. Apr. 2
Feb. 13. Mar. 8 : last
[seen Dec. 24
Feb. 13. Mar. 23 j Jan. 1. Apr. 17
Feb. 14—17
Apr. 1 : has young ones
[June 1
Feb. 14. Mar. 27
Feb. 2. Apr. 11, fl.
Feb. 15. Mar. 23
Feb. 18. Apr. 13
Feb. 16. Mar. 6
Feb. 28. Mar. 5
Feb. 17
Feb. 16. Mar. 20
Feb. 17. Mar. 8
Feb. 8. Mar. 31
388
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
House pigeon (Coluwba domesticd)
builds
Field crickets (Gryllus campestris)
open their holes
Common flea (Pulex irritans) ap.
Pilewort (Ficaria verna) fl.
Goldfinch (Fringilla carduelis}
sings
Viper ( Coluber berus) ap.
Woodlouse (Oniscus asellus) ap.
Missel thrushes (Turdus viscivorus)
pair
Daffodil (Narcissus pseudonarcissus)
fl.
Willow (Salix alba) fl.
Frogs (Rana temporarid) croak
Sweet violet ( Viola odorata) fl.
Phalxna tinea vestianclla ap.
Stone curlew (GEdicnemus crepitans)
clamours
Filbert ( Corylus sativus) fl.
Eing-dove (Columba palumbus) coos
Apricot tree (Prunus armeniaca) fl.
Toad (Rana bufd) ap.
Frogs (Rana temporarid) spawn
tvy-leaved speedwell (Veronica he-
derifolid) fl.
Peach (Amygdalus persicd) fl.
Frog (Rana temporarid) ap.
Shepherd's purse (Thlaspi bursa
pastoris) fl.
Pheasant (Phasianus colcliicus) crows
Land tortoise comes forth
Lungwort (Pulmonaria officinalis) fl.
Podura fimetaria ap.
Aranea scenica saliens ap.
Scolopendra forficata ap.
Wryneck (Yunx torquilld) returns
Goose lays
Duck lays
Dog violet ( Viola canind) fl.
Peacock butterfly (Papilio /o) ap.
Trout (Salmo farid) begin to rise
Beans ( Vicia fabd) planted
Bloodworms appear in the water
Crow (Corvus corone) builds
Oats (Avena sativa) sown
WHITE.
Feb. 18
MARKWICK.
Feb. 8, has young ones
Feb. 20. Mar. 30
! Feb. 21— 26
Feb. 21. Apr. 13
Jan. 25.
Mar. 26
Feb. 21. Apr. 5
Feb. 22. Mar. 26
Feb. 23. Apr. 1
Feb. 28.
Feb. 23.
Apr. 27.
May 5
May 6 : last
[seen Oct. 28
June 17
Feb. 24
Feb. 24. Apr. 7
Feb. 24. Apr. 2
Feb. 25
Feb. 26. Mar. 31
Feb. 26
Feb. 26.
Feb. 27.
Mar. 9.
Feb. 7.
Apr. 18
Apr. 11
Apr. 20
Apr. 5
Feb. 27. Apr. 24 ^ June 17
Feb. 27 Jan. 25.
Mar. 26
Feb. 27. Apr. 5
Feb.
Feb. 28. Mar.24
Feb. 28. Mar. 22
Mar.. 1. Apr. 2
Mar. 2. Apr. 17
Mar. 2. Apr. 6
Mar. 2.
Feb. 28.
Mar. 15.
Feb. 9.
Feb. 16.
Mar. 4.
Mar. 9
Aug. 10
Apr. 5
July 1
Apr. 10: tad-
[poles Mar. 19
Apr. 10
Apr. 29
Mar. 3
Mar. 3—29
Jan. 2.
Mar. 1 .
Apr. 16
May 22
Mar. 4. May 8
Mar. 4. Apr. 16 Mar. 2.
Mar. 4
• May 19
Mar. 4
Mar. 5 — 16
Mar. 5. Apr. 25
Mar. 5
Mar. 26.
Mar. 21
[seen Sept. 14
Apr. 23: last
Mar. 5 Mar. 28
Mar. 6. Apr. 18
Mar. 6
Mar. 7—14
Mar. 8
Mar. 8
Feb. 28.
Feb. 13.
Apr. 29
Apr. 22
Apr. 20 : last
[seen Dec. 25
emerge
Mar. 10
Mar. 10— 18
July 1, has young oiics
Mar. 16. Apr. 13
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
389
Golden crested wren (Regulus cris-
tatus) sings
Aspen (Populus tremula) fl.
Common elder (Sambucus nigra) 1.
Laurel (Prunus laurocerasus) fl.
Chrysomela gottingensis ap.
Black ant (Formica nigra) ap.
Ephemera biseta ap.
Gooseberry (Ribes grossularid) 1.
Common stitch wort (Stellaria holo-
stea) fl.
Wood anemone (Anemone nemorosa)
fl.
Blackbird (Turdus meruld) sits
Raven (Corvus corax) sits
Wheatear (Sylvia oenanthe) returns
Muskwood crowfoot (Adoxa moscha-
tellina) fl.
Small uncrested willow wren ap.
Fumaria bulbosa fl.
Elm (Ulmus campestris) fl.
Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) lays
House pigeon (Columba domesticd)
sits
Marsh marigold (Caltha palustris} fl.
Buzz-fly (Bombylius medius) ap.
Sand martin (Hirundo riparia) ap.
Snake (Coluber natrix) ap.
Horse ant (Formica herculanea) ap.
Greenfinch (Loxia chloris) sings
Ivy (Hedera helix) berries ripe
Periwinkle ( Vinca minor) fl.
Spurge laurel (Daphne laureola) fl.
Swallow (Hirundo rustica) ap.
Blackcap (Sylvia atricapilld) whistles
Ducks hatched
Golden saxifrage ( Chrysosplenium
oppositifoliwn) fl.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
[Dec. 23. Jan. 26
Mar. 12. Apr. 30
Apr. 15. May 22, seen
Mar. 12
Feb. 26. Mar. 28
Mar. 13—20
Jan. 24. Apr. 22
Mar. 15. May 21
Apr. 2. May 27
Mar. 15
Mar. 15. Apr. 22
Mar. 2. May 18
Mar. 16
Mar. 17. Apr. 11
Feb. 26. Apr. 9
Mar. 17. May 19
Mar. 8. May 7
Mar. 17. Apr. 22
Feb. 27. Apr. 10
Mar. 17
Apr. 14, lays : young
[ones May 19
Mar. 17
Apr. 1, builds
Mar. 18 — 30
Mar. 13. May 23: last
[seen Oct. 26
Mar. 18. Apr. 13
Feb. 23. Apr. 28
Mar. 19. Apr. 13
Willow wren (Sylvia
trochilus) Mar. 30.
May 16: sits May 27:
last seen Oct. 23
Mar. 19
Mar. 19. Apr. 4 Feb. 17. Apr. 25
Mar. 19. Apr. 7
Mar. 18—25: sits Apr.
[4 : young ones Apr. 30
Mar. 20
Mar. 20 : younghatched
Mar. 20. Apr. 14
Mar. 22. May 8
Mar.21. Apr. 28
Mar. 15. Apr. 30
Mar. 21. Apr. 12
Apr. 8. May 16: last
[seen Sept. 8
Mar. 22—30
Mar. 3. Apr. 29 : last
[seen Oct. 2
Mar. 22. Apr. 18
Feb. 4. Mar. 26 : last
[seen Nov. 12
Mar. 22. Apr. 22
Mar. 6. Apr. 26
Mar. 23. Apr. 14
Feb. 16. May 19
Mar. 25
Feb. 6. May 7
Mar. 25. Apr.l
Apr. 12 — 22
Mar. 26. Apr. 20
Apr. 7 — 27: last seen
[Nov. 16
Mar. 26. May 4
Apr. 14. May 18: seen
Apr. 14. May 20: last
seen Sept. 19
Mar. 27
Apr. 6. May 16
Mar. 27. Apr. 9
Feb. 7. Mar. 7
390
NATUBALIST'S CALENDAR.
Apr. 1. May 4
House martin ( Hirundo urbicd) ap.
Chimney swallow (Hirundo rusticd)
ap.
Double hyacinth (Hyacinthus orien-
talis) fl.
Young geese
Wood sorrel (Oxalis acetosella) fl.
Ring ouzel (Turdus torquatus) ap.
Barley (Hordeum sativum) sown
Nightingale (Sylvia luscinid) sings
Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) fl.
Spiders' webs on the surface of the
ground
Chequered daffodil (Fritillaria me-
leagris] fl.
Julus terrestris ap.
Cowslip (Primula veris) fl.
Ground ivy (Glechoma hederacea)
fl. j Apr. 3 — 15
Snipe (Scolopax gallinago} pipes Apr. 3
Box tree (Buxus sempervirens) fl. Apr. 3
Elm ( Ulmus campestris) 1. Apr. 3
Gooseberry (Ribes grossularid) fl. Apr. 3 — 14
Currant (Ribes hortensis) fl. Apr. 3 — 5
Pear tree (Pyrus communis) fl. Apr. 3. May 21
Newt or eft (Lacerta vulgaris) ap. Apr. 4
Dogs' mercury (Mercurialis peren-
nis} fl. Apr. 5 — 19
Wych elm (Ulmus glabra seu mon-
tana of Smith) fl. Apr. 5
Ladies smock (Cardamine pratensis)
fl. I Apr. 6—20
Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) heard I Apr. 7 — 26
Blackthorn (Prunus spinosd) fl. Apr. 7. May 10
Deathwatch (Termes pulsatorius)
beats Apr. 7
Gudgeon (Gobio jfluviatilis) spawns Apr. 7
Redstart (Ruticilla phcenicurd) ap. Apr. 8 — 28
Crown imperial (Fritillaria imperia-
lis) fl. Apr. 8—24
Titlark (Alauda pratensis) sings Apr. 9 — 19
Beech (Fagus sylvatica) 1. Apr. 10. May 8
Wood snail (Helix nemoralis) comes
out in troops Apr. 11. May 9
Middle yellow wren ap. Apr. 1 1
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
Mar. 28.
MayJ
Apr.
14.
May
8:
last
[seen
Dec. 8
Mar. 28.
Apr. 13
I
Mar. 29.
Apr. 22
Mar.
*3.
Apr.
24
Mar. 29
Mar.
29.
Apr.
19
Mar. 30.
Apr. 22
Feb.
26
Apr.
26
Mar. 30.
Apr. 17
Oct.
11
Mar. 31.
Apr. 30
Apr.
12.
May
20
Apr. 1.
Mayl
Apr.
5.
July
4:
last
Apr.l
Apr. 2 — 24
Apr. 2
Apr. 3—24
Apr. 15.
Mar. 3.
May 1
May 17
[seen Aug. 29
Mar. 16. May 8
Mar. 2. Apr. 16
Mar. 27. May 8
Apr. 2. May 19
Mar. 21. May 1
Mar. 24. Apr. 28
Mar. 30. Apr. 30
Feb. 17. Apr. 15: last
[seen Oct. 9
Jan. 20. Apr. 16
Apr. 19. May 10, 1-
Feb. 21. Apr. 26
Apr. 15. May 3 : last
[heard June 28
Mar. 16. May 8
Mar. 28. May 28
Apr. 5 : sings Apr. 25 :
[last seen Sept. 30
Apr. 1. May 13
Apr. 14—29: sits June
[16—27
Apr. 24. May 25
May 17. June 11 ap.
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
391
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
Swift (Cypselus apus) ap.
Apr. 13. May 7
Apr. 28. May 19
Stinging fly (Conops calcitrans) ap.
Apr. 14. May 17
Whitlow grass (Draba vernd) fl.
Apr. 14
Jan. 15. Mar. 24
Larch tree (Pinus larix rubrd) 1.
Apr. 14
Apr. 1. May 9
Whitethroat (Sylvia cinerea) ap.
Apr. 14. May 14
Apr. 14. May 5 : sings
May 3— 10: last seen
Sept. 23
Red ant (Formica rubra) ap.
Apr. 14
Apr. 9. June 26
Mole cricket (Gryllus gryllotalpd)
churs
Apr. 14. May 27
Second willow or laughing wren ap.
Apr. 14— 19— 23
Red rattle (Pedicularis sylvaticd)
fl.
Apr. 15 — 19
Apr. 10. June 4
Common flesh-fly (Musca carnarid)
ap.
Apr. 15
Ladybird (Coccinella bipunctatd) ap.
Apr. 16
Grasshopper lark (Salicaria locus-
tella) ap.
Apr. 16—30
Large shivering willow wren
Apr. 17. May 7
Willow wren, its shiver-
ing note heard Apr.
28. May 14
Middle willow wren ap.
Apr. 17 — 27
Wild cherry (Prunus cerasus) fl.
Apr. 18. May 12
Mar. 30. May 10
Garden cherry (Prunus cerasus) fl.
Apr. 18. May 11
Mar. 25. May 6
Plum (Prunus domestica) fl.
Apr. 18. May 5
Mar. 24. May 6
Harebell (Hyacinthus non-scriptus
seu Scilla nutans of Smith) fl.
Apr. 19—25
Mar. 27. May 8
Turtle (Columba turtur) coos
Apr. 20—27
May 14. Aug. 10: seen
Hawthorn (Crutcegus seu Mespilus
Oxyacantha of Smith) fl.
Apr. 20. June 11
Apr. 19. May 26
Male fool's orchis ( Orchis mascula) fl.
Apr. 21
Mar. 29. May 13
Blue flesh-fly (Musca vomitoria) ap.
Apr. 21. May 23
Black slug (Limax ater) abounds
Apr. 22
Feb. 1. Oct. 24, ap.
Apple tree (Pyrus mains sativus) fl.
Apr. 22. May 25
Apr. 11. May 26
Large bat ap.
Apr. 22. June 11
Strawberry, wild wood (Fragaria
vesca) fl.
Apr. 23 — 29
Apr. 8—9
Sauce alone (Erysimum alliarid) fl.
Apr. 23
Mar. 31. May 8
Wild or bird cherry (Prunus avium)
fl.
Apr. 24
Mar. 30. May 10
Apis hypnorum ap.
Apr. 24
Musca meridiana ap.
Apr. 24. May 28
Wolf fly (Asilus) ap.
Apr. 25
Cabbage butterfly (Papilio brassicce)
ap.
Apr. 28. May 20
Apr. 29. June 15
Dragon-fly (LibMuld) ap.
Apr. 30. May 21
Apr. 18. May 13: last
[seen Nov. 10
Sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) fl.
Apr. 30. June 6
Apr. 20. June 4
392
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
Bonibylius minor ap.
Glowworm {Lumpy ris noctilucd)
shines
Fern-owl or goatsucker (Caprimul-
gus europceus) returns
Common bugle (Ajuga reptans) fl.
Field crickets (Gryllus campestris)
trill
Chafer or May-bug (Scardbaus melo-
lonihd) ap.
Honeysuckle (Lonicera periclyme-
num) fl.
Toothwort (Lathraa squamaria) fl.
Wood snails {Helix nemoralis) pair
Sedge warbler (Salicaria phrag-
mitis} sings
Mealy tree ( Viburnum lantand) fl.
Flycatcher (Muscicapa grisold) ap.
Apis longicornis ap.
Reed warbler (Salicaria streperd)
ap.
Oak (Quercus robur) in male bloom
Admiral butterfly (Papilio atalantd)
ap.
Orange tip butterfly (Papilio carda-
mines) ap.
Beech (Fagus sylvaticd) fl.
Common maple (Acer campestris) fl.
Barberry tree (Berberis vulgaris) fl.
Wood Argus butterfly (Papilio cege-
rid) ap.
Orange lily (Lilium bulbiferum) fl.
Burnet moth (Sphinx JUipendulce) ap.
Walnut (Juglans regia) 1.
Laburnum (Cytisus laburnum) fl.
Forest fly (Hippobosca equind) ap.
Saintfoin (Hedysarum onobrychis) fl.
Peony (Pceonia officinalis) fl.
Horse chestnut (JEsculus hippocas-
tanum) fl.
Lilac (Syringa vulgaris} fl.
Columbine (Aquilegia vulgaris) fl.
Medlar (Mespilus germanicd) fl.
Tormentil (Tormentilla rcptans) fl.
Lily of the valley (Convallaria ma-
jalis) fl.
Bees (Apis mellificd) swarm
Woodroof (Asperula odoratd) fl.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
May 1
May 1 . June 1 1
June 19. Sept. 28
May 1—26
Mayl
May 16. Sept. 14
Mar. 27. May 10
May 2— 24
May 2—26
May 2. July 7
May 3 — 30
May 4— 12
May 4 — June 1 7
Apr. 24. June 21
May 4
May 5— 17
May 10—30
May 10. June 9
June 2—30
Apr. 25. May 22
Apr. 29. May 21
May 11— 13
May 13—15
Aug. 2
fl. Apr. 29. June 4
May 13
May 14
May 15—26
May 16
May 17— 26
Mar. 30. May 19
Apr. 23. May 28
Apr. 24. May 27
Apr. 28. June 4
May 17
May 18. June 11
May 18. June 13
May 18
May 18. June 5
May 18. June 9
May 19. June 8
May 20. June 15
June 14. July 22
May 24. June 26
Apr. 10. June 1
May 1. June 23
May 21. July 28
Apr. 18. May 26
May 21. June 9
May 21
May 2 1—27
May 21. June 20
May 21
Apr. 19. June 7
Apr. 15. May 30
May 6. June 13
Apr. 8. June 19
Apr. 17. June 11
May 22
May 22. July 22
May 22— 25
Apr. 27. June 13
May 12. June 23
Apr. 14. June 4
NATURALISTS CALENDAR.
393
Wasp, female ( Vespa vulgaris) ap.
Mountain ash (Sorbus seu Pyrus au-
cuparia of Smith) fl.
Bird's-nest orchis (Ophrys nidus
avis} fl.
White-beam tree (Cratagus} seu
Pyrus aria of Smith) 1.
Milkwort (Polygala vulgaris) fl.
Dwarf cistus (Cistus helianthemum)
fl.
Guelder rose ( Viburnum opulus} fl.
Common elder (Sambucus nigra) fl.
Cantharis noctiluca ap.
Apis longicornis bores holes in walks
Mulberry tree (Morus nigrd) 1.
Wild service tree (Cratcegus sen Py-
rus torminalis of Smith) fl.
Sanicle (Sanicula europcea) fl.
Avens (Geum urbanum) fl.
Female fool's orchis (Orchis morio)
fl.
Ragged Robin (Lychnis flos cuculi)
fl.
Burnet (Poterium sanguisorbd) fl.
Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) fl.
Corn flag (Gladiolus communis) fl.
Serapias longifolia fl.
Raspberry (Rubus idaus) fl.
Herb Robert (Geranium robertia-
num) fl.
Figwort (Scrophularia nodosa) fl.
Gromwell (Lithospermum officinale)
fl.
Wood spurge (Euphorbia amygda-
loides) fl.
Ramsons (Allium ursinum) fl.
Mouse-ear scorpion grass (Myosotis
scorpioides) fl.
Grasshopper (Gryllus grossus) ap.
Rose (Rosa hortensis) fl.
Mouse -ear hawkweed (Hieracium
pilose lid) fl.
Buckbean (Mcnyanthes trifoliata) fl.
Rose chafer (Scarabceus auratus) ap. i June 2 — 8
Sheep shorn
Water flag (Iris pseudacorus) fl.
Cultivated rye (Secale cereale) fl.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
May 23
May 23. June 8
Apr. 2. June 4 : last
[seen Nov. 2
Apr. 20. June 8
May 24. June 11
May 18. June 12
May 24. June 4
May 24. June?
May 3
Apr. 13. June 2
May 25
May 26
May 26. June 25
May 26
May 27. June 9
May 27. June 13
May 4. Aug. 8
May 10. June 8
May 6. June 17
May 20. June 11
May 27
Mav27, June 13
May 28
May 13. June 19
Apr. 23. June 4
May 9. June 11
May 28
Apr. 17. May 20
May 29. June 1
May 29
May 30. June 22
May 30. June 20
May 30. June 13
May 30. June 21
May 12. June 8
Apr. 30. Aug. 7
May 23. June 15
June 9. July 8
May 10. June 16
May 30
May 31
Mar. 7. May 16
May 12. June 20
May 31
May 10—24
June 1
June 1
Mar. 23. May 13
Apr. 21. June 4
June 1
June 1—14
June 1—21
Apr. 1 1 . June 1
Mar. 25. July 6 : last
[seen Nov. 3
June 7. July 1
•
Junel. July 16
June 1
June 2 — 8
June 2— 23
June 2
June 2
Apr. 19. June 12.
Apr. 20. June 8
Apr. 18. Aug. 4
May 23. June 17
May 8. June 9
May 27
394
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
Hound's tongue (Cynoglossum offici-
nale) fl.
Helleborine (Serapias latifolia) fl.
Green gold fly (Musca ccpsar) ap.
Argus butterfly (Papilio mcera) ap.
Spearwort (Ranunculus flammuld) fl.
Birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus)
fl.
Fraxinella or white dittany (Dictam-
nus albus) fl.
Phryganea nigra ap.
Angler's may-fly (Ephemera vulgata)
ap.
Ladies' fingers (Anthyllis vulneraria)
fl.
Bee orchis (Ophrys apiferd) fl.
Pink (Dianthus deltoides) fl.
Syringa (Philadelphus coronarius) fl.
Libellula virgo ap.
Vine (Vitis viniferd) fl.
Portugal laurel (Prunus lusitanicus)
fl.
Purple spotted martagon (Lilium
martagon) fl.
Meadow crane's-bill ( Geranium pra-
tense) fl.
Black bryony (Tamus communis) fl.
Field pea (Pisum sativum arvense) fl.
Bladder campion (Cucubalus behen
seu Silene inflata of Smith) fl.
Bryony (Bryonia alba) fl.
Hedge nettle (Stachys sylvaticd) fl.
Bittersweet (/Solatium dulcamara) fl.
Walnut (Juglans regid) fl.
Phallus impudicus ap.
Rosebay willow-herb (Epilobium an-
gmtifolium) fl.
Wheat (Triticum hybernum) fl.
Comfrey (Symphytum officinale) fl.
Yellow i>impemel(Lysimachia nemo-
rum) fl.
Tremella nostoc ap.
Buckthorn (Rhamnus catharticus) fl.
Cuckow-spit insect (Cicadaspuma-
ria) ap.
Dog-rose (Rosa canind) fl.
Large puff-ball (Lycoperdon bovistd)
ap.
WHITE.
Aug. 6
June 2
June 2
June '2
June 2
June3
June 3
June 3 — 11
June 3
June 3—14
June 4
June 4 July 4
June 5 — 19
June 5
June 5 — 20
June 7. July 30
June 8. July 1
June 8—25
June 8. Aug. 1
June 8
June 9
June 9
June 9
June 10
June 11
June 12
June 12. July 23
June 12
June 13. July22
June 13
June 13 — 30
June 15. Aug.24
June 16
June 16
June 17, 18
MARKWICK.
May 11. June 7
July 22. Sept. 6
Apr. 25. June 13
Apr. 10. June 3
June 9. July 24
June 1. Aug. 16
May 26. July 6
May 16. June 23
June 18. July 29
June 3. July 1 6
June 18. July 19
May 15. June 21
May 15. June 21
May 4. July 13
May 13. Aug. 17
May 28. June 24
May 15. June 20
Apr. 18. June 1
June 4. July 28
June 4 — 30
May 4. June 23
Apr. 10. June 12
May 25
June 2 — 21
May 24. June 21
June 17 Sept. 3 I May 6. Aug. 19
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
395
Mullein (Verbascum thapsus) fl.
Viper's bugloss (Echium vulgare) fl.
Meadow hay cut
Stag beetle (Lucanus cervus} ap.
Borage (Borago officinalis) fl.
Spindle tree (Euonymus europawi) fl.
Musk thistle (Carduus nutans) fl.
Dogwood (Cornus sanguined) fl.
Field scabious (Scdbiosa arvensis) fl.
Marsh thistle {Carduus palustris) fl.
Dropwort (Spircea jilipenduld) fl.
Great wild valerian ( Valeriana offici-
nalis) fl.
Quail (Perdix coturnix) calls
Mountain willow herb (Epilobium
montanurn) fl.
Thistleupon thistle( Carduus crispus)
fl.
Cow parsnep (Heracleum sphondy-
lium) fl.
Earth-nut (Bunium bulbocastanum
seu flexuosum of Smith) fl.
Young frogs (Rana temporaries) mi-
grate
CEstrus curvicauda ap.
Vervain (Verbena officinalis) fl.
Corn poppy (Papaver rhceas) fl.
Self-heal (Prunella vulgaris) fl.
Agrimony (Agrimonia eupatoria) fl.
Great horse-fly (Tabanus bovinus) ap.
Greater knapweed ( Centaurea scabi-
osa) fl.
Mushroom (Agaricus campestris) ap.
Common mallow (Malva sylvestris^ft..
Dwarf mallow (Malva rotundifolia)
fl.
St. John's Wort(Hypericumperfora-
tum) fl.
Broom rape (Orobanche major} fl.
Henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) fl.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
June 18
June 10. July 22
June 19
May 27. July 3
June 19. July 20
June 13. July 7
June 19
June 14 — 21
June 20
Apr. 22. July 26
June 20
May 11. June 25
June 20. July 4
June 4. July 25
June 21
May 28. June 27
June 21
June 16. Aug. 14
June 21—27
May 15. June 19
June 22. July 9
May 8. Sept. 3
June 22. July 7
May 22. July 21
June 22. July 4
July 23 : seen Sept 1
[—18
June 22
June 5 — 21
June 23 — 29
May 22. July 22
June 23
May 27. July 12
June 23
May 4—31
June 23. Aug. 2
June 24
June 24
June 10. July 17
June 24
Apr. 30. July 15
June 24
June 7—23
June 24 — 29
June 7. July 9
June 24. Aug. 2
June 25
June 7. Aug. 14
June 26. Aug. 30
Apr. 16. Aug. 16
June 26
May 27. July 13
! June 26
fl.
Deadly nightshade (Atropa bella-
donna) fl.
Truffles (Lycoperdon tuber) begin to
be found j June 28. July 29 j
Young partridges (Perdix cinerea)
fly June 28. July 31 July 8 — 28
June 26
June 27. July 4
June 27
June 15.
May 9.
May 13.
• — j -
July 12
July 25
June 19
June 27
June 5 — 14
June 27
May 22.
Aug. 14
396
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
Lime tree (Tilia europaa) fl.
Spear thistle (Carduus lanceolatus)
fl.
Meadow sweet (Spiraa ulmaria) fl.
Greenweed (Genista tinctoria) fl.
Wild thyme (Thymus se?*pyllum) fl.
Slachys germanica fl.
Day lily (Hemerocallis flavd) fl.
Jasmine (Jasminum officinale) fl.
Holyoak (Alcea rosed) fl.
Monotropa hypopitys fl.
Ladies' bedstraw (Galium verurn) fl.
Galium palustre fl.
Nipplewort (Lapsana communis) fl.
Welted thistle (Carduus acanthoides)
fl.
Sneezewort (Achillea ptarmica) fl.
Musk mallow (Malva moschata) fl.
Pimpernel (Anagallis arvensis) fl.
Hoary beetle (Scarabaus solstitialis)
ap.
Common thistle (Serratula arvensis
sen Carduus arvensis of Smith) fl.
Pheasant's eye (Adonis annua sen
autumnalis of Smith) fl.
Red eyebright (Euphrasia sen
Bartsia odontites of Smith) fl.
Thorough wax (Bupleurum rotundi-
foliuni) fl.
Cockle (Agrostemma githago) fl.
Ivy-leaved wild lettuce (Prenanthes
muralis) fl.
Feverfew (Matricaria seu Pyrethrum
parthenium of Smith) fl.
Stonecrop (Sedum acre) fl.
Privet (Ligustrum vulgare) fl.
Common toadflax (Antirrhinum lina-
ria) fl.
Perennial wild flax (Linum perenne)
fl.
Whortle-berries ( Vaccinium myrtil-
lus) ripe
Yellow base rocket (Reseda lutea) fl.
Blue-bottle (Centaurea cyanus) fl.
Dwarf carline thistle (Carduus acau-
lis) fl.
Bull-rush or cat's-tail (Typha lati-
folia) fl
WHITE.
MARKAVICK.
June 28. July 31
June 12.
July 30
June 28. July 12
June 27.
July 18
June 28
June 16.
July 24
June 28
June 4.
July 24
June 28
June 6.
July 19
June 29. July 20
June 29. July 4
May 29.
June 9
June 29. July 30 June 27.
July 21
June 29. Aug. 4 July 4.
Sept. 7
June 29. July 23
June 29 June 22.
Aug. 3
June 29
June 29 May 30.
July 24
June 29
June 30
June 22.
Aug. 3
June 30 June 9.
July 14
June 30 May 4.
June 22
June 30. July 17
July 1
June 15.
July 15
July 1
April 11.
July 15
July 2
June 20.
Aug. 10
July 2
July 2
May 14.
July 25
July 2 1 June 2.
July 25
July 2 ! June 19.
July 24
July 3 i June 8.
July 12
July 3 | June 3.
July 13
July 3
June 21.
Aug. 3
July 4
Apr. 21.
July 6
July 4—24
July 5
July 19
July 5
May 15.
Oct. 14
July 5—12
June 30.
Aug. 4
July 6
June 29.
July 21
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
397
Spiked willow-herb {Lythrum sali-
caria) fl.
Black mullein ( Verbascum nigrurn) fl.
Chrysanthemum coronarium, fl.
Marigolds {Calendula officinalis) fl.
Little field madder {Sherardia ar-
vensis) fl.
Field calamint {Melissa seu Thymus
nepeta of Smith) fl.
Black horehound {Ballota nigrd) fl.
Wood betony {Betonica officinalis) fl.
Round-leaved bell-flower {Campa-
nula rotundifolia) fl.
All-good {Chenopodium bonus Henri-
cus) fl.
Wild carrot (Daucus carota) fl.
Indian cress (Tropceolum majus) fl.
Cat-mint (Nepeta cataria] fl.
Cow-wheat {Melampyrum sylvaticum
seu pratense of Smith) fl.
Crosswort ( Valantia cruciata seu
Galium cruciatum of Smith) fl.
Cranberries ( Vaccinium oxy coccus)
ripe
Tufted vetch {Vicia cracca) fl.
Wood vetch (Vicia sylvatica) fl.
Little throat-wort {Campanula glo-
merata) fl.
Sheep's scabious {Jasione montana)ft.
Wild parsnep {Pastinaca sylvestris}ft.
White lily (Lilium candidum) fl.
Hemlock (Conium maculatum) fl.
Hedge parsley {Caucalis anthriscus)
fl.
Flying ants ap.
Moneywort {Lysimachia nummula-
ria} fl.
Scarlet martagon {Lilium chalcedoni-
cum) fl.
Lesser stitchwort {Stellaria gra-
minea) fl.
Fool's parsley {JEthusa cynapium) fl.
Dwarf elder (Sambucus ebulus) fl.
Young martins and swallows begin
to congregate
Potatoe {Solanum tuberosum} fl.
Wood angelica {Angelica sylvestris)
fl.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
July 6
July 6
July 6
July 6—9
June 24.
May 28.
Apr. 20.
Aug. 17
July 28
July 16
July 7
July 7
July 7
July 8—19
Jan. 11.
Thymus
June 16.
June 10.
June 6
Calamintha
[July 21
Sept. 12
July 15
July 8
June 12.
July 29
JulyS
July 8
July 8—20
July 9
Apr. 21.
June 7.
June 11.
June 15
July 14
July 25
July 9
May 2.
June 22
July 9
Apr. 10.
May 28
July 9_27
July 10
July 10
May 31.
July 8
July 11
July 11
July 12
July 12
July 13
July 28.
June 10.
June 21.
June 4.
Aug. 18
July 25
July 22
July 20
July 13
July 13— Aug.ll
Aug. 20
Sept. 19
July 13
June 14.
Aug. 16
July 14. Aug. 4
June 21.
Aug. 6
July 14
July 14
July 14—29
May 8.
June 9.
June 23
Aug. 9
July 14. Aug. 29 Aug. 12.
July 14 June 3.
Sept. 8
July 12
July 15
398
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
Digitalis ferruginea fl .
Ragwort {Senecio jacob&a) fl.
Golden rod (Solidago virgaurea) fl.
Star this tie {Centaur ea calcitrapa) fl.
Tree primrose {(Enothera biennis}
fl.
Peas (Pisum sativum) cut
Galega officinalis fl.
Apricots {Prunus armeniaca) ripe
Clown's allheal {Stachys palustris) fl.
Branching willow-herb {Epilobium
ramosurn) fl.
Rye harvest begins
Yellow centaury {Chlora perfoliata)
fl.
Yellow vetchling {Lathyrus apJiaca)
fl.
Enchanter's nightshade ( Circcea lute-
tiana) fl.
Water hemp agrimony {Eupatorium
cannabinurn) fl.
Giant throatwort {Campanula lati-
folia) fl.
Eyebright {Euphrasia officincilis) fl.
Hops (Humulus lupulus) fl.
Poultry moult
Dodder {Cuscuta europcea seu Epi-
thy mum of Smith) fl.
Lesser centaury (Gentianaseu Chi-
ronia centaurium of Smith) fl.
Creeping water parsnep {Sium nodi-
florum) fl.
Common spurrey (Spergula arvensis)
fl.
Wild clover (Tri folium pratense) fl.
Buckwheat {Poly gonumfagopy rum)
fl.
Wheat harvest begins
Great bur-reed {Spar^anium erec-
Marsh St. John's-woifc (Hypericum
elodes) fl.
Sun-dew {Drosera rotundifolia) fi.
Purple marsh cinquefoil ( ( lomarum
palustre) fl.
Wild cherries {Prunus cgra IMS) ripe
Lancashire asphodel (Anthet icum os-
sifragum) fl.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
July 15 — 25
July 15
June 22. July 13
July 15
July 7. Aug. 29
July 16
July 16. Aug. 16
July 16
June 12. July 18
July 17. Aug. 14
July 13. Aug. 15
July 17
July 17. Aug. 21
July 5. Aug. 16
July 17
June 12. July 14
July 17
July 17. Aug. 7
July 18. Aug. 15
June 15. Aug. 13
July 18
July 18
June 20. July 27
July 18
July 4. Aug. 6
[13. Aug. 14
July 19
Camp. Trachelium.July
July 19
May 28. July 19
July 19, Aug. 10
July 20. Aug. 17
July 19
July 20
July 9. Aug. 7
July 20
June 3. July 19
July 20
July 10. Sept. 11
July 21
Apr. 10. July 16
July 21
May 2. June 7
July 21
June 27. July 10
July 21. Aug. 23
July 11. Aug. 26
July 22
June 10. July 23
July 22 — 31
June 16. Aug. 10
Tuly 22
Aug. 1
July 22
May 27. July 12
July 22
July 22
June 21. July 29
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
399
Hooded willow-herb (Scutellaria ga-
lericulata) fl.
Water dropwort (GEnanthe fistulosa)
fl.
Horehound (Marrubium vulgare) fl.
Seseli caruifolium fl.
Water plantain (Alisma plantago) fl.
Alopecurus myosuroides fl.
Virgin's" bower (Clematis vitalbd) fl.
Bees kill the drones
Teasel (Dipsacus sylvestris) fl.
Wild marjoram (Origanum vulgare)
fl.
Swifts (Cypselus apus) begin to de-
part
Small wild teasel (Dipsacus pilosus)
fl.
Wood sage (Teucrium scorodonia)&.
Everlasting pea (Lathyrus latifolius)
fl.
Trailing St. John's wort (Hypericum
humifusum) fl.
White hellebore (Veratrum album)
fl.
Camomile (Anthemis nobilis) fl.
Lesser field scabious (Scabiosa co-
lumbaria) fl.
Sunflower (Helianthus multiflorus) fl.
Yellow loosestrife (Lysimachia vul-
garis) fl.
Swift (Cypselus apus) last seen
Oats (A vena sativa) cut
Barley (Ilordeum sativum) cut
Lesser hooded willow-herb (Scutel-
laria minor) fl.
Middle fleabane (Inula dysentericd)
fl.
Apis manicata ap.
Swallow-tailed butterfly (Papilio
machaori) ap.
Whame or burrel fly (CEstrus equi)
lays eggs on horses
Sow thistle (Sonchus arvensis) fl.
Plantain fritillary (Papilio cinxia)
ap.
Yellow succory (Picris hieracioides)
fl.
Musc.a mystacea ap.
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
July 23
June 2. July 31
July 23
July 23
July 24
July 24
July 25
July 25. Aug. 9.
July 25
July 26
May 31. July 21
July 13. Aug. 14
July 16. Aug. 3
July 26
July 17. Aug. 29
July 27 — 29
Aug. 5
July 28, 29
July 28
June 17. July 24
July 28
June 20. July 30
July 29
May 20. June 22
July 30
July 30
July 18—22
June 21. Aug. 20
July 30
July 31. Aug 6
July 13. Aug. 9
July 4. Aug. 22
July 31
July 31. Aug.27
Aug. 1—16
Aug. 1—26
July 2. Aug. 7
Aug. 11
July 26. Aug. 19
July 27. Sept. 4
Aug. 1
Aug. 8. Sept. 7
Aug. 2
Aug. 2
July 7. Aug. 3
Aug. 2
Aug. 3—19
Aug. 3
Apr. 20. June 7 : last
[seen Aug. 28
June 17. July 21
Aug. 3
Aug. 4
June 6 — 25 .
400
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
Canterbury bells (Campanula traclie-
lium) fl.
Mcntha longifolia fl.
Carline thistle (Carlina vulgaris) fl.
Venetian sumach (Rhus cotinus) fl.
Ptinus pectinicornis ap.
Burdock (Arctium lappa) fl.
Fell-wort (Gentiana amarelld) fl.
Wormwood (Artemisia absinthium)
fl.
Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) fl.
St. Barnaby's thistle (Centaurea
solstitialis) fl.
Meadow saffron (Colchicum antum-
nale) fl.
Michaelmas daisy (Aster trades-
canti) fl.
Meadow rue ( Thalictrum flavum) fl.
Sea holly (Eryngium maritimum) fl.
China aster (Aster chinensis) fl.
Boletus albus ap.
Lesser Venus' looking -glass( Campa-
nula hybridd) fl.
Carthamus tinctorius fl.
Goldfinch (Fringilla carduelis) young
broods ap.
Lapwings (Vanellus cristatus) con-
gregate
Black-eyed marble butterfly (Papilio
semele) ap.
Birds re-assume their spring notes
Devil's bit (Scabiosa succisd) fl.
Thistledown floats
Ploughman's spikenard (Conyza
squarrosa) fl.
Autumnal dandelion (Leontodon au-
tumnale) fl.
Flies abound in windows
Linnets (Fringilla linota) congre-
gate
Bulls make their shrill autumnal
noise
Aster amellus fl.
Balsam (Impatiens balsamind) fl.
Milk thistle (Carduus marianus) fl.
Hop -picking begins.
Beeches (Fagus sylvatica) begin to
be tinged with yellow
WHITE.
MARKWICK.
Aug. 5
Aug. 5
Aug. 7
Aug. 7 .
Aug. 7
Aug. 8
Aug. 8. Sept. 3
C. mcd. June 5. Aug. 1 }
July 21. Aug. 18
June 5. July 20
June 17. Aug. 4
Aug. 8
Aug. 8
July 22. Aug. 21
July 9. Aug. 10.
Aug. 10
Aug. 10 Sept. 13
Aug. 15. Sept. 29
Aug. 12. Sept. 27
Aug. 14
Aug. 14
Aug. 14. Sept. 2 8
Aug. 14
Aug. 11. Oct. 8
Aug. 6. Oct. 2
May 10
Aug. 15
Aug. 15
May 14
Aug. 15
June 15
Aug. 15. Sept. 12
Sept. 25 Feb. 4
Aug. 15
Aug. 16
Aug. 17
Aug. 17. Sept. 10
June 22. Aug. 23
Aug. 18
Aug. 18
Aug. 18
July 25
Aug. 18. Nov. 1
Aug. 22. Nov. 8
Aug. 20
Aug. 22
Aug. 23
Aug. 24
Aug. 24. Sept. 17
A ,, « o 4 C*^.wx4- on
May 22. July 26
Apr. 21. July 18
Sept. 1—15
C 4. K Oft
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
401
Soapwort (Saponaria officinalis) fl.
Ladies' traces (Ophrys spiralis) fl.
Small golden black -spotted butterfly
(Papilio phlceas) ap.
Swallow (Hirundo rustica) sings
Althaea frutex (Hibiscus syriacus) fl.
Great fritillary (Papilio paphia) ap.
Willow red under -wing moth (Pha-
Icena pactd) ap.
Stone curlew (Otis cedicnemus)
clamours
Phalana russula ap.
Grapes ripen
Wood owls (Strix aluco) hoot
Saffron butterfly (Papilio hyale) ap.
Ring ouzel (Turdus torquaius) ap-
pears on its autumnal visit
Flycatcher (Muscicapagrisold) with-
draws
Beans (Viciafaba) cut
Ivy (Hedera helix} fl.
Stares (Sturnus vulgaris) congregate
Wild honeysuckles (Lonicera peri-
clymenum) fl. a second time
Woodlark (Alauda arborea) sings
Woodcock (Scolopax rusticola )
comes
Strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo) fl.
Wheat sown
Swallows last seen. (N. B. The
house martin the latest.)
Redwing (Turdus iliacus) comes
Fieldfare (Turdus pilaris) comes
Gossamer fills the air
Chinese holyoak (Alcea rosed) fl.
Hen chaffinches (Fringilla ccelebs)
congregate
Wood pigeons (Columba palumbus)
come
Royston crow (Corvus comix) comes
Snipes (Scolopax gallinago) come
up into the meadows
WHITE.
Aug. 25
Aug. 27. Sept. 12
Aug. 29
Aug. 29
Aug. 30. Sept. 2
Aug. 30
Aug. 31
Sept. 1. Nov. 7
Sept. 1
Sept. 4. Oct. 24
Sept. 4. Nov. 9
Sept. 4
Sept. 4—30
Sept. 6—29
Sept. 11
Sept. 12. Oct. 2
Sept. 12. Nov. 1
Sept. 25
Sept. 28. Oct. 24
Sept. 29. Nov. 11
Oct. 1
Oct. 3. Nov. 9
Oct. 4. Nov. 5
Oct. 10. Nov. 10
Oct. 12. Nov. 23
Oct. 15—27
Oct. 19
Oct. 20. Dec. 31
Oct. 23. Dec. 27
Oct. 23. Nov. 29
Oct. 25. Nov. 20
D D
MARKWICK.
July 19. Aug. 23
Aug. 18. Sept. 18
Apr. 11.
July 20.
Aug. 20
Sept. 28
June 17
Aug. 31. Nov. 4
Aug. 5. Sept. 2 6
Sept. 4—30
Aug. 9. Oct. 14
Sept. 18. Oct. 28
June 4. Mar. 21
Oct. 1. Nov. 1: young
ones Apr. 28 : last
seen Apr. 1 1
May 21. Dec. 10
Sept. 23. Oct. 19
Nov. 16
Oct. 1. Dec. 18: sings
Feb. 10. Mar. 21
last seen Apr. 13
Oct. 13. Nov. 18: last
[seen May 1
July 7. Aug. 21
Oct. 13. Nov. 17: last
seen Apr. 15
[seen Apr. 14
Sept. 29. Nov. 11. las!
402
NATURALIST'S CALENDAR.
Tortoise begins to bury himself
Rooks (Corvusfrugilegus) visit their
nest trees
Bucks grunt
Primrose (Primula vulgaris) fl.
Green whistling plover (Charadrius
pluvialis) ap.
Helvella mitra ap.
Greenfinches (Fringilla chloris) flock
Hepatica fl.
Furze (Ulex europceus) fl.
Polyanthus (Primula poly antha) fl.
Young lambs dropped
Moles work in throwing up hillocks
Helleborus fcetidus fl.
Daisy (Bellis perennis) fl.
Wallflower (CJieiranihus clieiri seu
fruticuloms of Smith) fl.
Mezereon (Daphne mezereum) fl.
Snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis) fl.
WHITE.
Oct. 27. Nov. 26
Oct. 31. Dec. 25
Nov. 1
Nov. 10
Nov. 13, 14
Nov. 16
Nov. 27
Nov. 30. Dec. 29
Dec. 4—21
Dec. 7—16
Dec. 11 — 27
Dec. 12—23
Dec. 14—30
Dec. 15
Dec. 15
Dec. 15
Dec. 29.
WARKWICK.
June 29. Oct. 20
Oct. 7. Dec. 30
Feb. 19
Dec. 1G— 31
Dec. 31
Dec. 12. Feb. 21
Dec. 26—31
Nov. 5.
VKRTITIIR ANXU8.
THE
ANTIQUITIES
OF
S E L B O R N E,
THE COUNTY OF SOUTHAMPTON.
... ... Juvat ire ....
Desertosque videre locos VIRGIL,
THE ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE.
LETTER I.
,T is reasonable to suppose that in remote ages
this woody and mountainous district was in-
habited only by bears and wolves. Whether
the Britons ever thought it worthy their
attention, is not in our power to determine : l
but we may safely conclude, from circumstances, that it was
not unknown to the Romans. Old people remember to
have heard their fathers and grandfathers say that, in dry
summers and in windy weather, pieces of money were some-
times found round the verge of Wolmer Pond ; and tradition
had inspired the foresters with a notion that the bottom of
that lake contained great stores of treasure. During the
spring and summer of 1740 there was little rain; and the
following summer also, 1741, was so uncommonly dry, that
many springs and ponds failed, and this lake in particular,
whose bed became as dusty as the surrounding heaths and
wastes. This favourable juncture induced some of the
forest cottagers to begin a search, which was attended with
such success, that all the labourers in the neighbourhood
flocked to the spot, and with spades and hoes turned up
1 Several ancient " barrows " in Wolmer Forest, which have been
opened from time to time, have been found to contain fragments of
human bones and pottery, and in at least one instance an urn of
unburnt clay containing fragments of bones, tending to prove that the
barrows in question were of British origin in Roman times. — ED.
406 ANTIQUITIES
great part of that large area. Instead of pots of coins, as
they expected, they found great heaps, the one lying on the
other, as if shot out of a bag, many of which were in good
preservation. Silver and gold these inquirers expected to
find ; but their discoveries consisted solely of many hundreds
of Roman copper coins, and some medallions, all of the
lower empire. There was not much virtu stirring at that
time in this neighbourhood ; however, some of the gentry
and clergy around bought what pleased them best, and
some dozens fell to the share of the author.
The owners at first held their commodity at a high price ;
but finding that they were not likely to meet with dealers
at such a rate, they soon lowered their terms, and sold the
fairest as they could. The coins that were rejected became
current, and passed for farthings at the pettf .shops. Of
those that we saw, the greater part were of Marcus Aurelius,
and the Empress Faustina, his wife, the father and mother
of Commodus. Some of Faustina were in high relief, and
exhibited a very agreeable set of features, which probably
resembled that lady, who was more celebrated for her
beauty than for her virtues. The medallions in general
were of a paler colour than the coins. To pretend to
account for the means of their coming to this place would
be spending time in conjecture. The spot, I think, could
not be a Roman camp, because it is commanded by hills on
two sides ; nor does it show the least traces of intrench-
ments ; nor can I suppose that it was a Roman town, be-
cause I have too good an opinion of the taste and judgment
of those polished conquerors to imagine that they would
settle on so barren and dreary a waste.
OF SELBORNE.
407
LETTER II.
HAT Selborne was a place of some distinction
and note in the time of the Saxons, we can
give most undoubted proofs. But, as there
are few, if any, accounts of villages before
Domesday, it will be best to begin with that
venerable record. "Ipse rex tenet Selesburne. Eddid
regina tenuit, et nunquam geldavit. De isto manerio dono
dedit rex Radfredo presbytero dimidiam hidam cum ecclesia.
Tempore regis Edwardi et post, valuit duodecim solidos et
sex denarios ; modo octo solidos et quatuor denarios."
Here we see that Selborne was a royal manor ; and that
Editha, the queen of Edward the Confessor, had been lady
of that manor ; and was succeeded in it by the Conqueror ;
and that it had a church. Beside these, many circum-
stances concur to prove it to have been a Saxon village ;
such as the name of the place itself,1 the names of many
fields, and some families,2 with a variety of words in hus-
bandry and common life, still subsisting among the country
people.
What probably first drew the attention of the Saxons to
1 Selesburne, Seleburne, Selburn, Selbourn, Selborne, and Selborn, as
it has been variously spelt at different periods, is of Saxon derivation ;
for Sel signifies great, and burn torrens, a brook or rivulet : so that the
name seems to be derived from the great perennial stream that breaks
out at the upper end of the village. Sel also signifies " bonus, item,
fcecundus, fertilis. Sel-jaejijf-'cun, foecunda graminis clausura; fertile
pascuum. Abiit tamen apud nonnullos in nomen proprium. Inde pratum
quoddam apud Godelming in agro Surriensi hodie vocatur Sal-gars-ton"
Lye's Saxon Dictionary, in the Supplement, by Mr. Manning. — G. W.
2 Thus the name of Aldred signifies all-reverend, and that of Kemp
means a soldier. Thus we have a church- litton, or enclosure for dead
bodies, and not a church-yard : there is also a Culver-croft near the
Grange-farm, being the enclosure where the priory pigeon-house stood,
from culver, a pigeon Again there are three steep pastures in this
parish called the Lithe, from Hlithe, clivus. The wicker-work that binds
408 ANTIQUITIES
this spot was the beautiful spring or fountain called Well-
head/ which induced them to build by the banks of that
perennial current ; for ancient settlers loved to reside by
brooks and rivulets, where they could dip for their water
without the trouble and expense of digging wells and of
drawing.
It remains still unsettled among the antiquaries at what
time tracts of land were first appropriated to the chase
alone for the amusement of the sovereign. Whether our
Saxon monarchs had any royal forests does not, I believe,
appear on record; but the Constitutiones de Foresta of
Canute, the Dane, are come down to us. We shall not
therefore pretend to say whether Wolmer Forest existed
as a royal domain before the Conquest. If it did not, we
may suppose it was laid out by some of our earliest Norman
kings, who were exceedingly attached to the pleasures of
the chase, and resided much at Winchester, which lies at a
moderate distance from this district. The Plantagenet
princes seem to have been pleased with Wolmer ; for tra-
dition says that King John resided just upon the verge, at
Ward-le-ham, on a regular and remarkable mount, still
called King John's Hill, and Lodge Hill; and Edward III.
and fastens down a hedge on the top is called ether, from ether a hedge.
Whon the good women call their hogs they cry sic, sic,* not knowing
that sic is Saxon, or rather Celtic, for a hog. Coppice or brushwood
our countrymen call rise, from hris, frondes ; and talk of a load of rise.
Within the author's memory the Saxon plurals, housen and peason, were
in common use. But it would be endless to instance in every circum-
stance : he that wishes for more specimens must frequent a farmer's
kitchen. I have therefore selected some words to show how familiar
the Saxon dialect was to this district, since in more than seven hundred
years it is far from being obliterated. — G. W.
1 Well-head signifies spring-head, and not a deep pit from whence
we draw water. — For particulars about which see Letter I. to Mr.
Pennant. — G. W.
* " 2t/oa, porcus, apud Lacones ; un pourceau chez les Lacedemoniens •
ce mot a sans doute este pris des Celtes, qui disoient sic, pour marquer
un pourceau. Encore auj ourd'huy quandles Bretons chassentces animaux,
ils ne disent point autrement, que sic, sic." — FEZ RON, Antiquite dc la
Nation et de la Langue des Celtes.
OF SELBOENE. 409
had a chapel in his park, or enclosure, at Kingsley.1
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, and Eichard, Duke of
York, say my evidences, were both, in their turns, wardens
of Wolmer Forest; which seems to have served for an
appointment for the younger princes of the royal family,
as it may again.
I have intentionally mentioned Edward III. and the
Dukes Humphrey and Richard, before King Edward II.
because I have reserved, for the entertainment of my
readers, a pleasant anecdote respecting that prince, with
which I shall close this letter.
As Edward II. was hunting in Wolmer Forest, Morris
Ken, of the kitchen, fell from his horse several times ; at
which accidents the king laughed immoderately : and, when
the chase was over, ordered him twenty shillings ; 2 an
enormous sum for those days ! Proper allowances ought
to be made for the youth of this monarch, whose spirits
also, we may suppose, were much exhilarated by the sport
of the day; but, at the same time, it is reasonable to
remark that, whatever might be the occasion of Ken's
first fall, the subsequent ones seem to have been designed.
The scullion appears to have been an artful fellow, and to
have seen the king's foible ; which furnishes an early spe-
cimen of that his easy softness and facility of temper, of
which the infamous Gaveston took such advantages, as
brought innumerable calamities on the nation, and involved
the prince at last in misfortunes and sufferings too deplor-
able to be mentioned without horror and amazement.
1 The parish of Kingsley lies between, and divides Wolmer Forest
from Ayles Holt Forest. — See Letter IX. to Mr. Pennant.— G. W.
The church at Kingsley is a very humble structure, with a tower not
unlike a dovecot. Indeed the whole edifice strikingly bears out the
assertion of Gilbert White, that some of the Hampshire places of worship
make little better appearances than dovecots. — ED.
2 " Item, paid at the lodge at Wolmer, when the king was stag-hunting
there, to Morris Ken, of the kitchen, because he rode before the king
and often fell from his horse, at which the king laughed exceedingly — a
gift, by command, of twenty shillings." — A MS. in possession of Thomas
Astle, Esq., containing the private expenses of Edward II. — G. W.
410 ANTIQUITIES
LETTER III.
ROM the silence of Domesday respecting
churches, it has been supposed that few
villages had any at the time when that
record was taken ; but Selborne, we sec,
enjoyed the benefit of one : hence we may
conclude that this place was in no abject state, even at that
very distant period. How many fabrics have succeeded
each other since the days of Eadfredrus the presbyter, we
cannot pretend to say; our business leads us to a descrip-
tion of the present edifice, in which we shall be circum-
stantial.
Our church, which was dedicated to the Virgin Mary,
consists of three aisles, and measures fifty-four feet in length
by forty-seven in breadth, being almost as broad as it is
long. The present building has no pretensions to anti-
quity; and is, as I suppose, of no earlier date than the
beginning of the reign of Henry VII. It is perfectly plain
and unadorned, without painted glass, carved work, sculp-
ture, or tracery. But when I say it has no claim to anti-
quity, I would mean to be understood of the fabric in
general; for the pillars which support the roof are un-
doubtedly old, being of that low, squat, thick order, usually
called Saxon. These, I should imagine, upheld the roof
of a former church, which, falling into decay, was rebuilt on
those massy props, because their strength had preserved
them from the injuries of time.1 Upon these rest blunt
Gothic arches, such as prevailed in the reign above-men-
1 In the same manner, to compare great things with small, did Wyke-
ham, when he new built the cathedral at Winchester, from the tower
westward, apply to his purpose the old piers or pillars of Bishop Walke-
lin's church, by blending Saxon and Gothic architecture together. — See
Lowth's "Life of Wykeham."— G. W.
OF 8ELBORNE. 411
tioned, and by which, as a criterion, we would prove the date
of the building.1
At the bottom of the south aisle, between the west and
south doors, stands the font, which is deep and capacious,
and consists of three massy round stones, piled one on
another, without the least ornament or sculpture : the cavity
at the top is lined with lead, and has a pipe at bottom to
convey off the water after the sacred ceremony is per-
formed.
The east end of the south aisle is called the South Chancel,
SOUTH VIEW OF SELBORNE CHURCH.
and, till within these thirty years, was divided off by an old
carved Gothic frame work of timber, [the line of which may
still be traced in a beam of partition between the pews,]
having been a private chantry. In this opinion we are
more confirmed by observing two Gothic niches within the
space, the one in the east wall and the other in the south,
near which there probably stood images and altars : [but
1 The churches in some of the adjoining parishes are of very ancient
date, and well worth the attention of the antiquary. Those of Empshot
and Hartley in particular are very old structures, and probably referable
to a period anterior to the Norman Conquest. — ED.
412 ANTIQUITIES
these niches are in a different style of arch, and were pro-
bably not formed at the same time.]
In the middle aisle there is nothing remarkable; but
I remember when its beams were hung with garlands in
honour of young women of the parish, reputed to have died
virgins/ and recollect to have seen the clerk's wife cutting,
in white paper, the resemblances of gloves, and ribbons to
be twisted into knots and roses, to decorate these memo-
rials of chastity. In the church of Faringdon, which is the
next parish, many garlands of this sort still remain. [The
pulpit is placed at the eastern end of the middle aisle. At
the western end is an organ loft and organ : the latter being
a gift of the Rev. William Cobbold, a former vicar, to his
parishioners.]
The north aisle is narrow and low, with a sloping ceiling,
reaching within nine or ten feet of the floor. It had origi-
nally a flat roof covered with lead, till, within a century past,
a churchwarden stripping off the lead, in order, as he said, to
have it mended, sold it to a plumber, and ran away with the
money. This aisle has no door, for an obvious reason ;
because the north side of the churchyard, being surrounded
by the vicarage garden, affords no path to that side of the
church. Nothing can be more irregular than the pews of
this church, which are of all dimensions and heights, being
patched up according to the fancy of the owners; but
whoever nicely examines them will find that the middle
aisle had, on each side, a regular row of benches of solid
oak, all alike, with a low back-board to each. These we
should not hesitate to say are coeval with the present
church ; and especially as it is to be observed that, at their
ends, they are ornamented with carved blunt Gothic niches,
exactly correspondent to the arches of the church, and to a
niche in the south wall. The south aisle also has a row of
1 Virgin garlands were originally formed of real flowers, and garlands
so made are often alluded to by our old dramatists. We believe that
the custom referred to still prevails amongst the peasantry in some parts
of Yorkshire and Westmoreland. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 413
these benches; but some are decayed through age, and the
rest much disguised by modern alterations.1
At the upper end of this aisle and running out to the
north stands a transept, known by the name of the North
Chancel, measuring twenty- one feet from south to north,
and nineteen feet from east to west : this was intended, no
doubt, as a private chantry ; and was also, till of late,
divided off by a Gothic frame work of timber. In its north
wall, under a very blunt Gothic arch, lies perhaps the
founder of this edifice, which, from the shape of its arch,
may be deemed no older than the latter end of the reign of
Henry VII. The tomb was examined some years ago, but
contained nothing except the skull and thigh bones of a
large tall man, and the bones of a youth or woman, lying in
a very irregular manner, without any escutcheon or other
token to ascertain the names or rank of the deceased. The
grave was very shallow, and lined with stone at the bottom
and on the sides.2
From the east wall project four stone brackets, which I
conclude supported images and crucifixes. In the great
thick pilaster, jutting out between this transept and the
chancel, there is a very sharp Gothic niche, of older date
than the present chantry or church. But the chief pieces
of antiquity are two narrow stone coffin lids, which compose
part of the floor, and lie from west to east, with the very
narrow ends eastward : these belong to remote times ; and,
if originally placed here, which I doubt, must have been
part of the pavement of an older transept. At present
there are no coffins under them, whence I conclude they
have been removed to this place from some part of a former
church. One of these lids is so eaten by time, that no
sculpture can be discovered upon it ; or, perhaps, it may be
the wrong side uppermost : but on the other, which seems
1 Since this description was penned, considerable alterations have
naturally been effected in the interior of the church. — ED.
2 There is no longer any vestige of a tomb in the north wall of the
north chancel. — ED.
414 ANTIQUITIES
to be of stone of a closer and harder texture, is to be
discerned a discus, with a cross on it, at the end of a staff
or rod, the well known symbol of a Knight Templar.1
This order was distinguished by a red cross on the left
shoulder of their cloak, and by this attribute in their hand.
Now, if these stones belonged to Knights Templars, they
must have lain here many centuries; for this order came
into England early in the reign of King Stephen, in 1113 ;
and was dissolved in the time of Edward II. in 1312, having
subsisted only 199 years. Why I should suppose that
Knights Templars were occasionally buried at this church,
will appear in some future letter, when we come to treat
more particularly concerning the property they possessed
here, and the intercourse that subsisted between them and
the priors of Selborne.
We must now proceed to the chancel, properly so called,
which seems to be coeval with the church, and is in the
same plain unadorned style, though neatly kept. This
room measures thirty-one feet in length, and sixteen feet
and a half in breadth, and is wainscoted all round, as high
as to the bottom of the windows. [It is raised one step
above the body of the church.] The space for the com-
munion table is raised two steps above the rest of the floor,
and railed in with oaken balusters. [Over the communion
table is a painting in tLree compartments of the Offering of
the Wise Men, presented by Benjamin White, Esq. It is
attributed to John de Maubeuge.]
Here I shall say somewhat of the windows of the chancel
in particular, and of the whole fabric in general. They are
mostly of that simple and unadorned sort called Lancet,
some single, some double, and some in triplets. At the
east end of the chancel are two of a moderate size, near
each other; and in the north wall two very distant small
ones, unequal in length and height : and in the south wall
are two, one on each side of the chancel door, that are broad
and squat, and of a different order. At the east end of the
1 Sec Dugdale, "Monasticon Anglicanum," vol. ii. where there is a
fine engraving of a Knight- Templar, by Hollar. — Gr. W
OF SELBORNE. 415
south aisle of the church there is a large lancet window in a
triplet ; and a very small, narrow, single one in the south
wall, and two broad squat windows beside, and a double
lancet one in the west end ; so that the appearance is very
irregular. In the north aisle are two windows, made
shorter when the roof was sloped ; and in the north transept
a large triple window, shortened at the time of a repair in
1721 ; when over it was opened a round one of considerable
size, which affords an agreeable light, and renders that
chantry the most cheerful part of the edifice.1
The church and chancels have all coved roofs, ceiled
about the year 1683 ; before which they were open to the
tiles and shingles, showing the naked rafters, and threaten-
ing the congregation with the fall of a spar, or a blow from
a piece of loose mortar.
On the north wall of the chancel is fixed a large oval
white marble monument, with the following inscription ;
and at the foot of the wall, over the deceased, and inscribed
with his name, age, arms, and time of death, lies a large
slab of black marble :
Prope hunc Parietem Sepelitur
GILBERTUS WHITE, SAMSOXIS WHITE, de
Oxon. Militis Filius tertius, Collegii Magdale-
-nensis ibidem Alumnus, & Socius. Tandem faven-
-te Collegio ad hanc Ecclesiam promotus ; ubi primse-
-va Morum Simplicitate, et diffusa erga Omnes Bene-
-volentia feliciter Consenuit.
Pastor Fidelis, Comis, Affabilis,
Maritus, et Pater Amantissimns,
A Conjuge invicem, et Liberis. atque
A Parochianis, impense dilectus.
Pauperibus ita Beneficus
ut Decimam partem Census
Moribundus
Piis usibus Consecravit.
Meritis demum juxta et Annis plenus
ex hac Vita migravit Feb. 1 3°.
Anno Salutis 172f-
1 The "lancet" windows are evidently insertions in the place of
Perpendicular ones. Indeed, in some of them the work of the original
windows may be distinctly traced. The " round window " may afford
" an agreeable light," but it is by no means an object for admiration.
— ED.
416 ANTIQUITIES
JEtatis Suse 77.
Hoc Posuit Rebecca
Conjux illius maestissima,
mox Secutura.
On the same wall is newly fixed a small square table
monument of white marble, inscribed in the following
manner : —
Sacred to the Memory
of the Revd. ANDREW ETTY, B. D.
23 Years Vicar of this Parish :
In whose Character
The Conjugal, the Parental, and the Sacerdotal Virtues
were so happily combined
as to deserve the Imitation of Mankind.
And if in any particular he followed more invariably
The steps of his blessed Master,
It was in his Humility.
His Parishioners,
Especially the Sick and Necessitous,
as long as any Traces of his Memory shall remain,
Must lament his Death.
To perpetuate such an example, this Stone is erected ;
As while Living he was a Preacher of Righteousness,
So, by it, he being Dead yet Speaketh.
He died April 8th. 1784. Aged 66 years.
[But the most interesting monument to the visitant of
Selborne, that its church can ever contain, is one affixed to
the south wall. A square tablet of white marble, surrounded
by black and having a lightly ornamented margin and a label
below bearing the arms of the family, is thus inscribed :
In the fifth Grave from this Wall are interred tl.e Remains of
The Revd. GILBERT WHITE, M. A.
Fifty Years Fellow of Oriel College in Oxford,
and Historian of this, his native Parish.
He was the eldest Son of John White, Esquire, Barrister at Law,
and Anne, his Wife, only Child of
Thomas Holt, Rector of Streatham, in Surrey,
which said John White was the only Son of Gilbert White,
formerly Vicar of this Parish.
He was Kind and Beneficent To His Relations,
Benevolent to the Poor,
and deservedly respected by all his Friends and Neighbours.
He was born July 18, 1720, O. S.
and died June 20, 1793.
Nee bono quicquam mali evenire potest,
nee vivo, nee mortuo.]
OF SELBORNE. 417
LETTER IV.
iE have now taken leave of the inside of the
church, and shall pass by a door at the west
end of the middle aisle into the belfry. This
room is part of a handsome square embattled
tower of forty- five feet in height, and of
much more modern date than the church ; but old enough
to have needed a thorough repair in 1781, when it was
neatly stuccoed at a considerable expense, by a set of work-
men who were employed on it for the greatest part of the
summer. The old bells, three in number, loud and out of
tune, were taken down in 1735, and cast into four; to which
Sir Simeon Stuart, the grandfather of the present baronet,
added a fifth at his own expense ; and, bestowing it in the
name of his favourite daughter Mrs. Mary Stuart,, caused it
to be cast with the following motto round it :
" Clara puella dedit, dixitque mihi esto Maria :
Illius et laudes nomen ad astra sono."
The day of the arrival of this tuneable peal was observed
as a high festival by the village, and rendered more joyous,
by an order from the donor, that the treble bell should be
fixed bottom upward in the ground, and filled with punch, of
which, all present were permitted to partake.
The porch of the church, to the south, is modern, and
would not be worthy attention did it not shelter a fine sharp
Gothic door-way. This is undoubtedly much older than
the present fabric ; and, being found in good preservation,
was worked into the wall, and is the grand entrance into the
church ; nor are the folding doors to be passed over in
silence, since, from their thick and clumsy structure, and
the rude flourished work of their hinges, they may possibly
be as ancient as the door-way itself.
The whole roof of the south aisle, and the south side of
the roof of the middle aisle, is covered with oaken shingles
E E
418 ANTIQUITIES
instead of tiles, on account of their lightness, which favours
the ancient and crazy timber frame. And indeed, the con-
sideration of accidents by fire excepted, this sort of roofing
is much more eligible than tiles. For shingles well seasoned,
and cleft from quartered timber, never warp, nor let in
drifting snow ; nor do they shiver with frost ; nor are they
liable to be blown off, like tiles ; but, when well nailed down,
last for a long period, as experience has shown us in this
place, where those that face to the north are known to have
endured, untouched, by undoubted tradition for more than
a century.
Considering the size of the church, and the extent of the
parish, the churchyard is very scanty ; and especially as all
wish to be buried on the south side, which is become such
a mass of mortality that no person can be there interred with-
out disturbing or displacing the bones of his ancestors. There
is reason to suppose that it once was larger, and extended
to what is now the vicarage court and garden; because
many human bones have been dug up in those parts several
yards without the present limits. At the east end are a few
graves ; yet none till very lately on the north side ; but, as
two or three families of best repute have begun to bury in
that quarter, prejudice may wear out by degrees, and their
example be followed by the rest of the neighbourhood.1
In speaking of the church, I have all along talked of the
east and west end, as if the chancel stood exactly true to
those points of the compass ; but this is by no means the
case, for the fabric bears so much to the north of the east
that the four corners of the tower, and not the four sides,
stand to the four cardinal points. The best method of
accounting for this deviation seems to be, that the workmen,
who probably were employed in the longest days, endea-
voured to set the chancels to the rising of the sun.
Close by the church, at the west end, stands the vicarage
1 This prejudice seems to have died out. But the objection to bury
behind the church is apparently not confined to a Hampshire village.
We believe that in many towns of the north of England, the same scruple
exists. — ED.
OF SELBOENE.
419
house ; an old, but roomy and convenient edifice. It faces
very agreeably to the morning sun, and is divided from the
village by a neat and cheerful court. According to the
manner of old times, the hall was open to the roof ; and so
continued, probably, till the vicars became family-men, and
began to want more conveniences ; when they flung a floor
THE VICARAGE HOUSE.
across, and, by partitions, divided the space into chambers.
In this hall we remember a date, some time in the reign of
Elizabeth ; it was over the door that leads to the stairs.
Behind the house is a garden of an irregular shape, but
well laid out, whose terrace commands so romantic and
picturesque a prospect, that the first master in landscape
might contemplate it with pleasure, and deem it an object
well worthy of his pencil.
420 ANTIQUITIES
LETTER V.
the churchyard of this village is a yew-tree,
whose aspect bespeaks it to be of a great age ;
it seems to have seen several centuries, and
is probably coeval with the church, and there-
fore may be deemed an antiquity : the body is
squat, short, and thick, and measures [upwards of] twenty-
three feet in the girth, supporting a head of suitable extent
to its bulk. This is a male tree, which in the spring sheds
clouds of dust, and fills the atmosphere '.iround with its farina.
As far as we have been able to observe, the males of this
species become much larger than the females ; and it has so
fallen out that most of the yew-trees in the churchyards
of this neighbourhood are males ; but this must have been
matter of mere accident, since men, when they first planted
yews, little dreamed that there were sexes in trees.
In a yard, in the midst of the street, till very lately, grew
a middle sized female tree of the same species, which com-
monly bore great crops of berries. By the high winds
usually prevailing about the autumnal equinox, these berries,
then ripe, were blown down into the road, where the hogs
ate them. And it was very remarkable, that, though
barrow-hogs and young sows found no inconvenience from
this food, yet milch- sows often died after such a repast : a
circumstance that can be accounted for only by supposing
that the latter, being much exhausted and hungry, devoured
a larger quantity.
While mention is making of the bad effects of yew-
berries, it may be proper to remind the unwary, that the
twigs and leaves of yew, though eaten in a very small
quantity, are certain death to horses and cows, and that in
a few minutes. A horse tied to a yew hedge, or to a faggot
stack of dead yew, shall be found dead before the owner
can be aware that any danger is at hand, and the writer
has been several times a sorrowful witness to losses of this
kind among his friends ; and in the island of Ely had once
OF SELBORNE. 421
the mortification to see nine young steers or bullocks of his
own all lying dead in a heap from browzing a little on a
hedge of yew in an old garden into which they had broken
in snowy weather. Even the clippings of a yew hedge have
destroyed a whole dairy of cows when thrown inadvertently
into a yard. And yet sheep and turkeys, and, as park-
keepers say, deer, will crop these trees with impunity.
Some intelligent persons assert that the branches of yew,
while green, are not noxious ; and that they will kill only
when dead and withered, by lacerating the stomach ; but to
this assertion we cannot by any means assent, because,
among the number of cattle that we have known fall victims
to this deadly food, not one has been found, when it was
opened, but had a lump of green yew in its paunch. True it
is, that yew trees stand for twenty years or more in a field,
and no bad consequences ensue ; but at some time or other
cattle, either from wantonness when full, or from hunger
when empty (from both which circumstances we have seen
them perish) , will be meddling, to their certain destruction ;
the yew seems to be a very improper tree for a pasture field.
Antiquaries seem much at a loss to determine at what
period this tree first obtained a place in churchyards. A
statute passed A.D. 1307 and 35 Edward I. the title of
which is " Ne rector arbores in cemeterio prosternat." Now
if it is recollected that we seldom see any other very large
or ancient tree in a churchyard, but yews, this statute must
have principally related to this species of tree; and
consequently their being planted in churchyards is of much
more ancient date than the year 1307.
As to the use of these trees, possibly the more respect-
able parishioners were buried under their shade before the
improper custom was introduced of burying within the body
of the church, where the living are to assemble. Deborah,
Rebekah's nurse,1 was buried under an oak; the most
honourable place of interment probably next to the cave of
Machpelah,2 which seems to have been appropriated to the
remains of the patriarchal family alone.
1 Gen. xxxv. 8. '2 Gen. xxiii. 9.
422
ANTIQUITIES
The farther use of yew trees might be as a screen to
churches, by their thick foliage, from the violence of winds;
perhaps also for the purpose of archery, the best long bows
being made of that material ; and we do not hear that they
arc planted in the churchyards of other parts of Europe,
where long bows were not so much in use. They might
also be placed as a shelter to the congregation assembling
before the church doors were opened, and as an emblem of
mortality by their funereal appearance.1 In the south of
England every churchyard almost has its tree, and some
two; but in the north, we understand, few are to be found.2
The idea of R. C. that the yew tree afforded its branches
instead of palms for the processions on Palm Sunday, is a
good one, and deserves attention. — See Gent. Mag. vol. i.
p. 128.
LETTER VI.
HE living of Selborne was a very small vicar-
age; but, being in the patronage of Magdalen
College, in the university of Oxford, that
society endowed it with the great tithes of
Selborne, more than a century ago, and
ainca the year 1758 again with the great tithes of Oak-
hanger, called Bene's Parsonage: so that, together, it is
become a respectable piece of preferment, to which one of
the fellows is always presented. The vicar holds the great
tithes, by lease, under the college. The great disadvan-
tage of this living is, that it has not one foot of glebe near
home.3
1 Or perhaps of immortality by their evergreen foliage : whence,
probably, the derivation of the name yew, q. d. ewig, everlasting. — ED.
2 In the northern churchyards the place of the yew is supplied by
the ash, lime, and horse-chestnut. Yew trees, however, and some of
them of large size, are frequently to be met with in the courtyards and
ifardens of ancient mansions in the north of England. — ED.
* At Bene's, or Bin's parsonage there is a house and stout barn, and
OF SELBOENE. 423
ITS PAYMENTS ARE,
£ s. d.
King's books ..........821
Yearly tenths 0 16 2J
Yearly procurations for Blackmore and Oak-
hanger Chap : with acquit : 017
Selborne procurations and acquit : .... 0 9 0
I am unable to give a complete list of the vicars of this
parish till towards the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth ;
from which period the registers furnish a regular series.
In Domesday we find thus — " De isto manerio dono
dedit Eex Radfredo presbytero dimidiam hidam cum
ecclesia." So that before Domesday, which was compiled
between the years 1081 and 1086, here was an officiating
minister at this place.
After this, among my documents, I find occasional men-
tion of a vicar here and there : the first is
Roger, instituted in 1254.
In 1410 John Lynne was vicar of Selborne.
In 1411 Hugo Tybbe was vicar.
The presentations to the vicarage of Selborne generally
ran in the name of the prior and the convent ; but Tybbe
was presented by prior John Wynechestre only.
June 29, 1528, William Fisher, vicar of Selborne, resigned
to Miles Peyrson.
1594, William White appears to have been vicar to this
time. Of this person there is nothing remarkable, but
that he hath made a regular entry twice in the register of
Selborne of the funeral of Thomas Cowper, Bishop of Win-
chester, as if he had been buried at Selborne ; yet this
learned prelate, who died 1594, was buried at Winchester,
in the cathedral, near the episcopal throne.1
1595, Richard Boughton, vicar.
seven acres of glebe. Bene's parsonage is three miles from the church.
— G. W.
1 See Godwin " de Praesulibus Angliae," folio, Cant. 1743, pa<*e 239.
— G. W.
424 ANTIQUITIES
[Sept. 6] 1596, William Inkforbye, vicar. [Buried
Jan. 6, 1606.]
May [16] 1606, Thomas Phippes, vicar. [Buried May 27,
1631, at Harteley Mauduit.]
June 1631, Ralph Austine, vicar. [Buried at Oxford,
March 24, 1631. j
July 1632, John Longworth. This unfortunate gentle-
man, living in the time of Cromwell's usurpation, was de-
prived of his preferment for many years, probably because
he would not take the league and covenant : for I observe
that his father-in-law, the Reverend Jethro Beal, rector of
Faringdon, which is the next parish, enjoyed his benefice
during the whole of that unhappy period. Longworth,
after he was dispossessed, retired to a little tenement about
one hundred and fifty yards from the church, where he
earned a small pittance by the practice of physic. During
those dismal times it was not uncommon for the deposed
clergy to take up a medical character ; as was the case in
particular, I know, with the Reverend Mr. Yalden, rector of
Compton, near Guildford, in the county of Surrey. Vicar
Longworth used frequently to mention to his sons, who
told it to my relations, that, the Sunday after his depriva-
tion, his puritanical successor stepped into the pulpit with
no small petulance and exultation : and began his sermon
from Psalm xx. 8: "They are brought down and fallen;
but we are risen and stand upright." This person lived to
be restored in 1660, and continued vicar for eighteen years;
but was so impoverished by his misfortunes, that he left the
vicarage house and premises in a very abject and dilapidated
state.
July 1678. Richard Byfield, [B.D.] who left eighty
pounds by will, the interest to be applied to apprentice out
poor children : but this money, lent on private security, was
in danger of being lost, and the bequest remained in an
unsettled state for near twenty years, till 1700 ; so that
little or no advantage was derived from it. About the
year 1759 it was again in the utmost danger by the failure
of a borrower ; but, by prudent management, has since
been raised to one hundred pounds stock in the three per
OF SELBOENE. 425
cents, reduced. The trustees are the vicar and the renters
or owners of Temple, Priory, Grange, Blackmore, and Oak-
hanger House, for the time being. This gentleman seemed
inclined to have put the vicarial premises in a comfortable
state ; and began, by building a solid stone wall round the
front court, and another in the lower yard, between that and
the neighbouring garden ; but was interrupted by death
from fulfilling his laudable intentions. [He lies buried in
the chancel of his church ; and a black slab, within the rails
of the communion table and near the north wall, com-
memorates him.]
April [7], 1680, Barnabas Long became vicar. [Dr.
Long appears to have resigned the vicarage in consequence
of obtaining other preferment. We learn from Wood that
on the 6th of February, 1681, he was installed prebend of
Botesant in the church of York ; and, on the 24th of May,
1682, of Stillington also. From the same authority it may
be added that he died in 1685.]
June [23], 1681. ^ This living was now in such low
estimation in Magdalen College, that it descended to a
junior fellow, Gilbert White, M.A., who was instituted
to it in the thirty-first year of his age. At his first coming
he ceiled the chancel, and also floored and wainscoted the
parlour and hall, which before were paved with stone and
had naked walls ; he enlarged the kitchen and brewhouse,
and dug a cellar and well : he also built a large new barn in
the lower yard, removed the hovels in the front court,
which he laid out in walks and borders ; and entirely
planned the back garden, before a rude field with a stone-pit
in the midst of it. By his will he gave and bequeathed
" the sum of forty pounds to be laid out in the most neces-
sary repairs of the church : that is, in strengthening and
securing such parts as seem decaying and dangerous."
With this sum two large buttresses were erected to support
the east end of the south wall of the church ; and the gable
end wall of the west end of the south aisle was new built
from the ground.
By his will also he gave tf One hundred pounds to be
laid out on lands; the yearly rents whereof shall be em-
426 ANTIQUITIES
ployed in teaching the poor children of Selbourne parish to
read and write, and say their prayers and catechism, and to
sew and knit : — and be under the direction of his executrix
as long as she lives ; and, after her, under the direction of
such of his children and their issue, as shall live in or
within five miles of the said parish : and on failure of any
such, then under the direction of the vicar of Selbourn for
the time being ; but still to the uses above-named."
With this sum were purchased, of Thomas Turville, of
Hawkely, in the county of Southampton, yeoman, and
Hannah his wife, two closes of freehold land, commonly
called Collier's, containing, by estimation, eleven acres,
lying in Hawkeley aforesaid. These closes are let at this
time, 1785, on lease, at the rate of three pounds by the
year.1
This vicar also gave by will two hundred pounds towards
the repairs of the highways'2 in the parish of Selborne.
That sum was carefully and judiciously laid out in the
summer of the year 1730, by his son John White, who
made a solid and firm causey from Rood Green, all down
Honey Lane, to a farm called Oak Woods, where the sandy
soil begins. This miry and gulfy lane was chosen as
worthy of repair, because it leads to the forest, and thence
through the Holt to the town of Farnham in Surrey, the
only market in those days for men who had wheat to sell in
this neighbourhood. This causey was so deeply bedded
with stone, so properly raised above the level of the soil,
and so well drained, that it has, in some degree, withstood
fifty-four years of neglect and abuse; and might, with
moderate attention, be rendered a solid and comfortable
road. The space from Rood Green to Oak Woods measures
about three quarters of a mile.
In 1727, William Henry Cane, B.D., became vicar; and,
1 The fac-simile of the author's autograph, subjoined to the original
advertisement prefixed to the present volume, is taken from his signature
to the lease here referred to. — ED.
2 " Such legacies were very common in former times, before any
effectual laws were made for the repairs of highways." — Sir John
Cullum's " Hawsted," p. 15. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 427
among several alterations and repairs, new built the back
front of the vicarage house.
On February 1, 1740, Duncombe Bristowe, D.D., was
instituted to this living. What benefactions this vicar
bestowed on the parish will be best explained by the fol-
lowing passages from his will : — " Item, I hereby give and
bequeath to the minister and churchwardens of the parish
of Selbourn, in the county of Southampton, a mahogany
table, which I have ordered to be made for the celebration
of the Holy Communion ; and also the sum of thirty
pounds, in trust, to be applied in manner following ; that
is, ten pounds towards the charge of erecting a gallery at
the west end of the church ; and ten pounds to be laid out
for clothing, and such like necessaries, among the poor
(and especially among the ancient and infirm) of the said
parish : and the remaining ten pounds to be distributed in
bread, at twenty shillings a week, at the discretion of John
White, Esq., or any of his family, who shall be resident in
the said parish."
On November 12, 1758, Andrew Etty, B.D., became
vicar. Among many useful repairs he new roofed the
body of the vicarage 'house ; and wainscoted, up to the
bottom of the windows, the whole of the chancel, to the
neatness and decency of which he always paid the most
exact attention.
On September 25, 1784, Christopher Taylor, B.D., was
inducted into the vicarage of Selborne.
428 ANTIQUITIES
LETTER VII.
SHALL now proceed to the Priory, which is
undoubtedly the most interesting part of
our history.
The Priory of Selborne was founded by
Peter de la Roche, or de Rupibus,1 one of those
accomplished foreigners that resorted to the court of King
John, where they were usually caressed, and met with a
more favourable reception than ought, in prudence, to have
been shown by any monarch to strangers. This adventurer
was a Poictevin by birth, had been bred to arms in his
youth, and distinguished by knighthood. Historians all
agree not to speak very favourably of this remarkable
man ; they allow that he was possessed of courage and fine
abilities, but then they charge him with arbitrary prin-
ciples and violent conduct. By his insinuating manners
he soon rose high in the favour of John; and in 1205, early
in the reign of that prince, was appointed Bishop of Win-
chester. In 1214 he became Lord Chief Justiciary of
England, the first magistrate in the state, and a kind
of viceroy, on whom depended all the civil affairs in
the kingdom. After the death of John, and during the
minority of his son Henry, this prelate took upon him the
entire management of the realm, and was soon appointed
protector of the king and kingdom.
The barons saw with indignation a stranger possessed of
all the power and influence, to part of which they thought
they had a claim ; they therefore entered into an association
against him, and determined to wrest some of that authority
from him which he had so unreasonably usurped. The
bishop discerned the storm at a distance ; and, prudently
1 See Godwin " de Praesulibus Angliae," folio, Cant. 1743, p. 217. —
G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 429
resolving to give way to that torrent of envy which he
knew not how to withstand, withdrew quietly to the Holy
Land, where he resided some time.
At this juncture a very small part of Palestine remained
in the hands of the Christians : they had been by Saladine
dispossessed of Jerusalem, and all the internal parts, near
forty years before ; and with difficulty maintained some
maritime towns and garrisons : yet the busy and enter-
prising spirit of de Rupibus could not be at rest ; he dis-
tinguished himself by the splendour and magnificence of
his expenses, and amused his mind by strengthening for-
tresses and castles, and by removing and endowing of
churches. Before his expedition to the east he had sig-
nalized himself as a founder of convents, and as a benefactor
to hospitals and monasteries.
In the year 1231 he returned again to England; and the
very next year, in 1232, began to build and endow the
PRIORY of SELBORNE. As this great work followed so close
upon his return, it is not improbable that it was the result
of a vow made during his voyage ; and especially as it was
dedicated to the Virgin Mary. Why the bishop made
choice of Selborne for the scene of his munificence can
never be determined now : it can only be said that the
parish was in his diocese, and lay almost midway between
Winchester and Farnham, or South Waltham and Farn-
ham ; from either of which places he could without much
trouble overlook his workmen, and observe what progress
they made ; and that the situation was retired, with a
stream running by it, and sequestered from the world,
amidst woods and meadows, and so far proper for the site
of a religious house.1
1 The institution at Selborne was a priory of Black Canons of the
order of St. Augustine, called also Canons Regular. Regular Canons
were such as lived in a conventual manner, under one roof, had a
common refectory and dormitory, and were bound by vows to observe
the rules and statutes of their order; in fine, they were a kind of
religious, whose discipline was less rigid than the monks'. The chief
rule of these canons was that of St. Augustine, who was constituted
Bishop of Hippo, A.D. 395 ; but they were not brought into England
430 ANTIQUITIES
The first person with whom the founder treated about the
purchase of land was Jacobus de Achangre, or Ochangre, a
gentleman of property who resided at that hamlet ; and, as
appears, at the house now called Oakhanger House. With
him he agreed for a croft, or little close of land, known by
the name of La Liega, or La Lyge, which was to be the
immediate site of the Priory.
De Achangre also accommodated the bishop at the same
instant with three more adjoining crofts, which for a time
was all the footing that this institution obtained in the
parish. The seller in the conveyance says, ' ' Warantizabi-
mus, defendemus, et acquietabimus contra omnes gentes ;"
viz. " We will warrant the thing sold against all claims
from any quarter." In modern conveyancing this would
be termed a covenant for further assurance. Afterwards is
added — "Pro hac autem donacione, &c. dedit mihi pred.
Episcopus sexdecem marcas argenti in Gersumam:" i.e.
" the bishop gave me sixteen silver marks as a consideration
for the thing purchased/'
As the grant from Jac. de Achangre was without date,1
and the next is circumstanced in the same manner, we
cannot say exactly what interval there was between the two
purchases ; but we find that Jacobus de Nortun, a neigh-
bouring gentleman, also soon sold to the Bishop of Win-
chester some adjoining grounds, through which our stream
passes, that the priory might be accommodated with a mill,
which was a common necessary appendage to every manor :
he also allowed access to these lands by a road for carts and
waggons. — " Jacobus de Nortun concedit Petro Winton
episcopo totum cursum aque que descendit de Molendino
till after the conquest ; and seem not to have obtained the appellation
of Augustine Canons till some years after. Their habit was a long
black cassock, with a white rocket over it ; and over that a black cloak
and hood. The monks were always shaved : but these canons wore
their hair and beards, and caps on their heads. There were of these
canons, and women of the same order called Canonesses, about one
hundred and seventy-five houses. — G. W.
1 The custom of affixing dates to deeds was not become general in
the reign of Henry III. — G. W.
OF SELBOENE. 431
de Durton, usq ; ad boscum Will. Mauduit, et croftam terre
vocat : Edriche croft, cum extensione ejusdein et abutta-
mentis; ad fundandam domum religiosam de ordine Sti.
Augustini. Concedit etiam viam ad carros, et caretas," &c.
This vale, down which runs the brook, is now called the
Long Lithe, or Lythe. Bating the following particular
expression, this grant runs much in the style of the former ;
" Dedit mihi episcopus predictus triginta quinque marcas
argenti ad me acquietandum versus Judceos." — That is,
" the bishop advanced me thirty-five marks of silver to pay
my debts to the Jews," who were then the only lenders
of money.
Finding himself still straitened for room, the founder
applied to his royal master, Henry, who was graciously
pleased to bestow certain lands in the manor at Selborne
on the new priory of his favourite minister. These grounds
had been the property of Stephen de Lucy ; and, abutting
upon the narrow limits of the convent, became a very com-
modious and agreeable acquisition. This grant, I find, was
made on March the 9th, in the eighteenth year of Henry,
viz., 1234, being two years after the foundation of the
monastery. The royal donor bestowed his favour with a
good grace, by adding to it almost every immunity and
privilege that could have been specified in the law language
of the times. — " Quare volumus prior, &c., habeant totam
terram, &c., cum omnibus libertatibus in bosco et piano, in
viis et semitis, pratis et pascuis ; aquis et piscariis ; intra
burgum, et extra burgum, cum soka et saca, Thol et Them,
Infangenethef et Utfangenethef, et hamsocne et blodwite,
et pecunia que dari solet pro murdro et forstal, et fleniene-
strick, et cum quietancia de omni scotto et geldo, et de
omnibus auxiliis regum, vicecomitum, et omn : ministralium
suorum ; et hidagio et exercitibus, et scutagiis, et tallagiis,
et shiris et hundredis, et placitis et querelis, et warda et
wardpeny, et opibus castellorum et pontium, et clausuris
parcorum, et omni carcio et sumagio, et domor : regal :
edificatione, et omnimo'la reparatione, et cum omnibus aliis
libertatibus." This grant was made out by Richard, Bishop
of Chichester, then chancellor, at the town of Northampton,
432 ANTIQUITIES
before the lord chief justiciary, who was the founder him
self.
The charter of foundation of the Priory, dated 1233,
comes next in order to be considered; but being of some
length, I shall not interrupt my narrative by placing it
here.1 My copy, taken from the original, I have compared
1 Carta Petri et conventus ecclesie Winton. pro fundatione prioratus de
Seleburne, SfC. dat 1233.
Omnibus Christ! fidelibus ad quos presens scriptum pervenerit. P.
divina miseracione Winton ecclesie minister humilis salutem in Domino :
Ex officio pastorali tenenrar viros religiosos, qui pauperes spiritu esse
pro Christo neglectis lucris temporalibus elegerunt ; spiritual! affectu
diligere, fovere pariter et creare, eorumq ; quieti sollicite providere ; ut
tanto uberiores fructus de continua in lege Dei meditatione percipiant,
quanto a conturbationibus malignorum amplius fuerint ex patroni
provisione et ecclesiastica defensione securi. Hinc est quod universitati
vestre notificamus, nos divine caritatis instinctu, de assensu conventus
ecclesie nostre Winton, fundasse domum religiosam, ordinis magni patris
Augustini, in honore Dei et gloriose semper virginis ejusdem Dei gene-
tricis Marie, apud Seleburne ; ibidemque canonicos regulares instituisse :
ad quorum sustentationem et hospitum et pauperum susceptionem, dedi-
mus, concessimus, et present! carta nostra confirmavimus eisdem
canonicis, totam terrain quam habuimns de dono Jacobi de Acangre : et
totam terram, cursum aque, boscum et pratum que habuimus de dono
Jacobi de Nortone ; et totam terram boscum et redditum que habuimus
de dono domini Hcnrici regis Anglie; cum omnibus predictarum pos-
sessionum pertinentiis. Dedimus etiam et concessimus in proprios usus
eisdem canonicis ecclesiam predicte ville de Seleburne, et ecclesias de
Basing, et de Basingestok, cum omnibus earundem ecclesiarum capellis,
libertatibus, et aliis pertinenciis ; salva honesta et sufficient! sustenta-
tione vicariorum in predictis ecclesiis ministrantium ; quorum presen-
tatio ad priorem predicte domus religiose de Seleburne et canonicos
ejusdem loci in perpetuum pertinebit. Preterea possessiones et redditus,
ecclesias sive decimas, quas in episcopatu nostro adempti sunt, vel in
posterum, Deo dante, justis modis poterunt adipisci, sub nostra et
Winton ecclesie protectione suscepimus, et episcopalis auctoritate officii
confirmavimus ; eadem auctoritate firmiter inhibentes, ne quis locum, in
quo divino sunt ofScio mancipati, seu alias eorum possessiones, invadere
vi vel fraude vel ingenio malo occupare audeat, vel etiam retinere, aut
fratres converses, servientes, vel homines eorum aliqua violentia pertur-
bare, sive fugientes ad eos causa salutis sue conservande a septis domus
sue violenter presumat extraere. Precipimus autem ut in eadem domo
religiosa de Seleburne ordo canonicus, et regularis conversatio, secundum
regulam magni patris Augustini, quam primi inhabitatores professi
sunt, in perpetuum observetur ; et ipsa domus religiosa a cujuslibet
OF SELBORNE. 433
with Dugdale's copy, and find that they perfectly agree ;
except that in the latter the preamble and the names of the
witnesses are omitted. Yet I think it proper to quote a
passage from this charter — " Et ipsa domus religiosa a
cujuslibet alterius domus religiosce subjections libera perma-
neat, et in omnibus absolute" — to show how much Dugdale
was mistaken when he inserted Selborne among the alien
priories; forgetting that this disposition of the convent
contradicted the grant that he had published. In the
Monasticon Anglicanum, in English, p. 119, is part of his
catalogue of alien priories, suppressed 2 Henry V. viz.
1414, where may be seen as follows : —
S.
Sele, Sussex.
SELEBUKN.
Shirburn.
This appeared to me from the first to have been an over-
sight, before I had seen my authentic evidences. For
priories alien, a few conventual ones excepted, were little
better than granges to foreign abbeys; and their priors
little more than bailiffs, removable at will: whereas the
priory of Selborne possessed the valuable estates and
manors of Selborne, Achangre, Norton, Brompden, Bas
singes, Basingstoke, and Natele ; and the prior challenged
alterius domus religiose subjectione libera permaneat, et in omnibus
absoluta ; salva in omnibus episcopali auctoritate, et Winton ecclesie
dignitate. Quod ut in posterum ratum permaneat et inconcussum,
present! scripto et sigilli nostri patrocinis duximus confirmandum. His
testibus domino Waltero abbate de Hyda. Domino Walters Priore de
sancto Swithuno, domino Stephano priore de Motesfonte, magistro Alano
de Stoke ; magistro Willo de sancte Marie ecclesia, tune officiali nostro ;
Luca archidiacon' de SUIT', magistro Humfrido de Millers •, Henrico &
Hugone capellanis, Roberto de Clinchamp, et Petro Rossinol clericis, et
multis aliis. Datum apud Wines* per manum P. de cancellis. In die
sanctorum martirum Fabiani et Sebastiani. Anno Domi milesimo
ducentesimo tricesimo tercio. .
Seal, two saints and a bishop praying :
Legend : SVL M. SITG. BONI. P6TK' PAVL' 6 PATRONI.
* Probably Wolvesey-house near Winchester. — G. W.
P F
434 ANTIQUITIES
the right of Pillory, Thurcet, and Furcas, and every mano-
rial privilege.
I find next a grant from Jo. de Venur, or Venuz, to the
prior of Selborne — "de tota mora [a moor or bog] ubi Bene
oritur, usque ad campum vivarii, et de prato voc. Syden-
meade cum abutt : et de cursu aque molendini." And also
a grant in reversion ' ' unius virgate terre " [a yard land] in
Achangre at the death of Eichard Actedene his sister's
husband, who had no child. He was to present a pair of
gloves of one penny value to the prior and canons, to be
given annually by the said Eichard j and to quit all claim
to the said lands in reversion, provided the prior and canons
would engage annually to pay to the king, through the
hands of his bailiffs of Aulton, ten shillings at four quar-
terly payments, apro omnibus serviciis, consuetudinibus,
exactionibus, et demandis."
This Jo. de Venur was a man of property at Oakhanger,
and lived probably at the spot now called Chapel Farm.
The grant bears date the seventeenth year of the reign of
Henry III. [viz. 1233].
It would be tedious to enumerate every little grant for
lands or tenements that might be produced from my
vouchers. I shall, therefore, pass over all such for the
present, and conclude this letter with a remark that must
strike every thinking person with some degree of wonder.
No sooner had a monastic institution got a footing, but the
neighbourhood began to be touched with a secret and reli-
gious awe. Every person round was desirous to promote
so good a work ; and either by sale, by grant, or by gift in
reversion, was ambitious of appearing a benefactor. They
who had not lands to spare gave roads to accommodate the
infant foundation. The religious were not backward in
keeping up this pious propensity, which they observed so
readily influenced the breasts of men. Thus did the more
opulent monasteries add house to house, and field to field ;
and, by degrees, manor to manor, till at last " there was no
place left •" but every district around became appropriated
to the purposes of their founders, and every precinct was
drawn into the vortex.
OF SELBORNE.
435
LETTER VIII.
UR forefathers in this village were no doubt
as busy and bustling, and as important, as
ourselves : yet have their names and trans-
actions been forgotten from century to cen-
tury, and have sunk into oblivion ; nor has
this happened only to the vulgar, but even to men remark-
able and famous in their generation. I was led into this
train of thinking by finding in my vouchers that Sir Adam
Gurdon was an inhabitant of Selborne, and a man of the
first rank and property in the parish. By Sir Adam Gurdon
I would be understood to mean that leading and accom-
plished malecontent in the Mountfort faction, who distin-
guished himself by his daring conduct in the reign of
Henry III. The first that we hear of this person in my
papers is, that with two others he was bailiff of Alton before
the sixteenth of Henry III. viz. about 1231, and then not
knighted. Who Gurdon was, and whence he came, does
not appear: yet there is reason to suspect that he was
originally a mere soldier of fortune, who had raised himself
by marrying women of property. The name of Gurdon
does not seem to be known ir the south ; but there is a
name so like it in an adjoining kingdom, and which belongs
to two or three noble families, that it is probable this
remarkable person was a North Briton ; and the more so,
since the Christian name of Adam is a distinguished one to
this day among the family of the Gordons. But, be this as
it may, Sir Adam Gurdon has been noticed by all the writers
of English history for his bold disposition and disaffected
spirit, in that he not only figured during the successful
rebellion of Leicester, but kept up the war after the defeat
and death of that baron, intrenching himself in the woods
of Hampshire, towards the town of Farnham. After the
battle of Evesham, in which Mountfort fell, in the year 1265,
Gurdon might not think it safe to return to his house for
436 ANTIQUITIES
fear of a surprise; but cautiously fortified himself amidst
the forests and woodlands with which he was so well
acquainted. Prince Edward, desirous of putting an end
to the troubles which had so long harassed the kingdom,
pursued the arch-rebel into hjs fastnesses; attacked his
camp ; leaped over the intrenchments ; and, singling out
Gurdon, ran him down, wounded him, and took him
prisoner.1
There is not perhaps in all history a more remarkable
instance of command of temper, and magnanimity, than
this before us: that a young prince, in the moment of
victory, when he had the fell adversary of the crown and
royal family at his mercy, should be able to withhold his
hand from that vengeance which the vanquished so well
deserved. A cowardly disposition would have been blinded
by resentment : but this gallant heir-apparent saw at once
a method of converting a most desperate foe into a lasting
friend. He raised the fallen veteran from the ground, he
pardoned him, he admitted him into his confidence, and
introduced him to the queen, then lying at Guildford, that
very evening. This unmerited and unexpected lenity melted
the heart of the rugged Gurdon at once ; he became in an
instant a loyaLand useful subject, trusted and employed in
matters of moment by Edward when king, and confided in
till the day of his death.
LETTER IX.
T has been hinted in a former letter that Sir
Adam Gurdon had availed himself by mar-
rying women of property. By my evidences
it appears that he had three wives, and pro-
bably in the following order : Constantia,
Ameria, and Agnes. The first of these ladies, who was the
companion of his middle life, seems to have been a person
1 M. Paris, p. 675, and Triveti Annales.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 437
of considerable fortune, which she inherited from Thomas
Makerel, a gentleman of Selborne, who was either her
father or uncle. The second, Ameria, calls herself the
quondam wife of Sir Adam, " quas fui uxor," &c., and talks
of her sons under age. Now Gurdon had no son : and
beside Agnes in another document says, " Ego Agnes
quondam uxor Domini Adas Gurdon in pura et ligea vi-
duitate mea : " but Gurdon could not leave two widows ;
and therefore it seems probable that he had been divorced
from Ameria, who afterwards married and had sons. By
Agnes Sir Adam had i daughter Johanna, who was his
heiress, to whom Agnes in her lifetime surrendered part
of her jointure: — he had also a bastard son.
Sir Adam seems to have inhabited the house now called
Temple, lying about two miles east of the church, which
had been the property of Thomas Makerel.
In the year 1262 he petitioned the prior of Selborne in
his own name, and that of his wife Constantia only, for
leave to build him an oratory in his manor house, " in curia
sua." Licenses of this sort were frequently obtained by
men of fortune and rank from the bishop of the diocese,
the archbishop, and sometimes, as I have seen instances,
from the pope ; not only for convenience sake, and on
account of distance, and the badness of the roads, but as a
matter of state and distinction. Why the owner should
apply to the prior, in preference to the bishop of the dio-
cese, and how the former became competent to such a
grant, I cannot say ; but that the priors of Selborne did
take that privilege is plain, because some years afterward,
in 1280, Prior Richard granted to Henry Waterford and
his wife Nichola a license to build an oratory in their court
house, " curia sua de Waterford," in which they might
celebrate divine service, saving the rights of the mother
church of Basynges. Yet all the while the prior of Sel-
borne grants with such reserve and caution, as if in doubt
of his power, and leaves Gurdon and his lady answerable in
future to the bishop, or his ordinary, or to the vicar for the
time being, in case they should infringe the rights of the
mother church of Selborne.
438
ANTIQUITIES
The manor house called Temple is at present a single
building, running in length from south to north, and has
been occupied as a common farm house from time imme-
morial. The south end is modern, and consists of a brew-
house, and then a kitchen. The middle part is a hall
twenty-seven feet in length and nineteen feet in breadth ;
and has been formerly open to the top ; but there is now a
floor above it, and also a chimney in the western wall. The
roofing consists of strong massive rafter-work ornamented
with carved roses. I have often looked for the lamb and
TEMPLE, IN THE PARISH OF SELBOBNE.
flag, the arms of the Knights Templars, without success ;
but in one corner found a fox with a goose on his back, so
coarsely executed that it required some attention to make
out the device.
Beyond the hall to the north is a small parlour with a
vast heavy stone chimney-piece ; and, at the end of all, the
chapel or oratory, whose massive thick walls and narrow
windows at once bespeak great antiquity. This room is
only sixteen feet by sixteen feet eight inches ; and full seven-
teen feet nine inches in height. The ceiling is formed of vast
joists, placed only five or six inches apart. Modern delicacy
OF SELBORNE. 439
would not much, approve of such, a place of worship ; for it
has at present much more the appearance of a dungeon than
of a room fit for the reception of people of condition. The
field on which this oratory abuts is still called Chapel Field.
The situation of this house is very particular, for it stands
upon the immediate verge of a steep abrupt hill.
Not many years since, this place was used for a hop-kiln,
and was divided into two stories by a loft, part of which re-
mains at present, and makes it convenient for peat and turf,
with which it is stowed.1
LETTER X.
HE Priory at times was much obliged to Gur-
don and his family. As Sir Adam began to
advance in years he found his mind influenced
by the prevailing opinion of the reasonable-
ness and efficacy of prayers for the dead ;
and therefore, in conjunction with his wife Constantia, in
the year 1271, granted to the prior and convent of Selborne
all his right and claim to a certain place, placea, called La
Pleystow, in the village aforesaid, " in libemm, puram, et
perpetuam elemosinam" This Pleystow,2 locus ludorum} or
play-place, is a level area near the church of about forty-
four yards by thirty-six, and is known now by the name of
the Plestor.3
1 There is not a vestige now remaining of the house described by
Gilbert White. But the modern residence, in its whitened walls,
slated roof, and squared form (the very reverse of the irregular and
picturesque building represented on the opposite page), occupies nearly
the same position with its predecessor, and commands the same exten-
sive view over the forest, — ED.
2 In Saxon Plegej-top, or Plegycop ; viz. Plegestow, or Plegstow.
— G. W.
3 At this juncture probably the vast oak, mentioned p. 5, was planted
by the prior, as an ornament to his new acquired market-place. Accord-
ing to this supposition the oak was aged four hundred and thirty-two
years when blown down. — G. W.
440
ANTIQUITIES
It continues still, as it was in old times, to be the scene
of recreation for the youths and children of the neighbour-
hood ; and impresses an idea on the mind that this village,
even in Saxon times, could not be the most abject of places,
when the inhabitants thought proper to assign so spacious a
spot for the sports and amusements of its young people.1
THE PLESTOR.
As soon as the prior became possessed of this piece of
ground, he procured a charter for a market2 from King
Henry III., and began to erect houses and stalls, " seldas,"
around it. From this period Selborne became a market
town, but how long it enjoyed that privilege does not
1 For more circumstances respecting the Plestor, see Letter II. to
Mr. Pennant. — G. W.
2 Bishop Tanner, in his Notitia Monastica, lias made a mistake re-
specting the market and fair at Selborne ; for, in his references to Dods-
worth, cart. 54 Hen. III. m. 3. he says, " De mercatu, et feria de Scle-
burn" But this reference is wrong ; for, instead of Seleburn, it proves
that the place there meant was Lekeborne or Legeborn, in the county
of Lincoln. This error was copied from the index of the Cat. MSS.
Angl. It does not appear that there ever was a chartered fair at Sel-
borne. For several particulars respecting the present fair at Selborne
see Letter XXVI. of these Antiquities.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 441
appear. At the same time Gurdon reserved to himself and
his heirs a way through the said Plestor to a tenement and
some crofts at the upper end, abutting on the south corner
of the churchyard. This was, in old days, the manorial
house of the street manor, though now a poor cottage ; and
is known at present by the modern name of Elliot's. Sir
Adam also did, for the health of his own soul, and that of
his wife Constantia, their predecessors and successors, grant
to the prior and canons quiet possession of all the tenements
and gardens, " curtillagia," which they had built and laid
out on the lands in Selborne, on which he and his vassals,
"homines," had undoubted right of common; and more-
over did grant to the convent the full privilege of that right
of common ; and empowered the religious to build tene-
ments and make gardens along the king's highway in the
village of Selborne.
From circumstances put together, it appears that the above
were the first grants obtained by the Priory in the village of
Selborne, after it had subsisted about thirty-nine years :
moreover they explain the nature of the mixed manor still
remaining in and about the village, where one field or tene-
ment shall belong to Magdalen College in the university of
Oxford, and the next to Norton Powlet, Esq., of Rotherfield
House ; and so down the whole street. The case was, that
the whole was once the property of Gurdon, till he made his
grants to the convent ; since which some belongs to the
successors of Gurdon in the manor, and some to the college ;
and this is the occasion of the strange jumble of property.
It is remarkable that the tenement and crofts which Sir
Adam reserved at the time of granting the Plestor should
still remain a part of the Gurdon manor, though so desirable
an addition to the vicarage that is not as yet possessed of one
inch of glebe at home : but of late, viz. in January, 1785,
Magdalen College purchased that little estate, which is life-
holding, in reversion, for the generous purpose of bestowing
it and its lands, being twelve acres (three of which abut
on the churchyard and vicarage garden) as an improvement
hereafter to the living, and an eligible advantage to future
incumbents.
442 ANTIQUITIES
The year after Grurdon had bestowed the Plestor on the
Priory, viz. in 1272, Henry III. King of England died, and
was succeeded by his son Edward. This magnanimous
prince continued his regard for Sir Adam, whom he esteemed
as a brave man, and made him warden, " custos" of the
forest of Wolmer.1 Though little emolument might hang to
this appointment, yet are there reasons why it might be
1 Since the letters respecting Woliner Forest and Ayles Holt, from
pp. 17 to 33, were printed, the author has been favoured with the follow-
ing extracts :
In the " Act of Resumption, 1 Hen. VII." it was provided, that it be
not prejudicial to "Harry at Lode, ranger of our forest of Wolmere, to
him by oure letters patents before tyme gevyn." — Rolls of Parl. vol. vi.
p. 370.
Jn the 11 Hen. VII. 1495.— " Warlham [Ward-le-ham] and the
office of forest [forester] of Wolmere " were held by Edmund, Duke of
Suffolk.— Rolls, ib. 474.
Act of general pardon, 14 Hen. VIII. 1523, not to extend to " Rich.
Bp. of Wynton [Bishop Fox] for any seizure or forfeiture of liberties,
&c. within the forest of Wolmer, Alysholt, and Newe Forest ; nor to
any person for waste, &c. within the manor of Wardlam, or parish of
Wardlam [Ward-le-ham ;] nor to abusing, &c. of any office or fee, with-
in the said forests of Wolmer or Alysholt, or the said park of Ward-
lam."— County Suth't. Rolls prefixed to first Vol. of Journals of
the Lords, p. xciii. b.
To these may be added some other particulars, taken from a book
lately published, entitled " An Account of all the Manors, Messuages,
Lands, &c. in the different Counties of England and Wales, held by
Lease from the Crown; as contained in the Report of the Commis-
sioners appointed to inquire into the State and Condition of the Royal
Forests," &c.— London, 1787.
" Southampton."
P. 64. "A fee-farm rent of £31 2,9. lid. out of the manors of East
and West Wardleham; and also the office of lieutenant or keeper of the
forest or chase of Aliceholt and Wolmer, with all offices, fees, commodi-
ties, and privileges thereto belonging.
" Names of lessees, William, Earl of Dartmouth and others (intrust).
" Date of the last lease, March 23, 1780 ; granted for such term as
would fill up the subsisting term to thirty -one years.
"Expiration March 23, 1811."
" Appendix, No. III."
" Southampton."
" Hundreds — Selborne and Finchdeanc.'''
" Honours and manors," &c.
" Aliceholt Forest, three parks there.
OF SELBORNE. 443
highly acceptable ; and, in a few reigns after, it was given
to princes of the blood.1 In old days gentry resided more
at home on their estates, and, having fewer resources of
elegant in-door amusement, spent most of their leisure
hours in the field and the pleasures of the chase. A large
domain, therefore, at a little more than a mile distance,
and well-stocked with game, must have been a very eligible
acquisition, affording him influence as well as entertainment;
and especially as the manorial house of Temple, by its ex-
alted situation, could command a view of near two-thirds of
the forest.
That Gurdon, who had lived some years the life of an
outlaw, and, at the head of an army of insurgents, was for
a considerable time in high rebellion against his sovereign,
should have been guilty of some outrages, and should have
committed some depredations, is by no means matter of
wonder. Accordingly we find a distringas against him,
ordering him to restore to the Bishop of Winchester some
of the temporalities of that see, which he had taken by
violence and detained, viz., some lands in Hocheleye, and a
mill.2 By a breve, or writ, from the king, he is also en-
joined to readmit the Bishop of Winchester, and his tenants
of the parish and town of Farnham, to pasture their horses,
and other larger cattle, " averia," in the Forest of Wolmer,
as had been the usage from time immemorial. This writ is
dated in the tenth year of the reign of Edward, viz., 1282.
All the king's writs directed to Gurdon are addressed in
the following manner : (( Edwardus, Dei gratia, &c. dilecto
et fideli suo Ade Gurdon salutem;" and again, "xCustodi
foreste sue de Wolvemere."3
In the year 1293 a quarrel between the crews of an
" Bensted and Kingsley ; a petition of the parishioners concerning
the three parks in Aliceholt Forest."
William, first Earl of Dartmouth, and paternal grandfather to the
present Lord Stawel, was a lessee of the forests of Aliceholt and Wol-
mer, before Brigadier- General Emanuel Scroope Howe. — G. W.
1 See Letter II. of these Antiquities.— G. W.
2 Hocheleye, now spelt Hawkley, is in the hundred of Selborne, and
has a mill at this day. — G. W.
3 See p. 27, note 4.— ED,
444 ANTIQUITIES
English and a Norman ship, about some trifle, brought on
by degrees such serious consequences, that in 1295 a war
broke out between the two nations. The French king,
Philip the Hardy, gained some advantages in Gascony ; and,
not content with those, threatened England with an invasion,
and, by a sudden attempt, took and burnt Dover.
Upon this emergency Edward sent a writ to Gurdon,
ordering him and four others to enlist three thousand sol-
diers in the counties of Surrey, Dorset, and Wiltshire, able-
bodied men, ' ' tarn saggitare quam balistare potentes : " and
to see that they were marched, by the feast of All Saints, to
Winchelsea, there to be embarked aboard the king's trans-
ports.
The occasion of this armament appears also from a sum-
mons to the Bishop of Winchester to parliament, part of
which I shall transcribe on account of the insolent menace
which is said therein to have been denounced against the
English language : — " qualiter rex Francia3 de terra nostra
Gascon nos fraudulenter et cautelose decepit, earn nobis
nequiter detinendo . . . vero predictis fraude et nequitia non
contentus, ad expugnationem regni nostri classe maxima et
bellatorum copiosa multitudine congregatis, cum quibus
regnum nostrum et regni ejusdem incolas hostiliter jam
invasurus, linguam Anglicam, si concepte iniquitatis pro-
posito detestabili potestas correspondeat, quod Deus avertat,
omnino de terra delere proponit" Dated 30th September,
in the year of King Edward's reign xxiii.1
The above are the last traces that I can discover of
Gurdon's appearing and acting in public. The first notice
that my evidences give of him is, that, in 1232, being the
sixteenth of Henry III., he was the king's bailiff, with
others, for the town of Alton. Now, from 1232 to 1295 is
a space of sixty-three years ; a long period for one man to
be employed in active life ! Should any one doubt whether
all these particulars can relate to one and the same person,
I should wish him to attend to the following reasons why
1 Reg. Wynton, Stratford, but query Stratford ; for Stratford was not
Bishop of Winton till 1323, near thirty years afterwards. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 445
they might. In the first place, the documents from the
Priory mention but one Sir Adam Gurdon, who had no son
lawfully begotten ; and in the next, we are to recollect that
he must have probably been a man of uncommon vigour
both of mind and body ; since no one, unsupported by such
accomplishments, could have engaged in such adventures,
or could have borne up against the difficulties which he
sometimes must have encountered ; and, moreover, we have
modern instances of persons that have maintained their
abilities for near that period.
Were we to suppose Gurdon to be only twenty years of
age in 1232, in 1295 he would be eighty- three ; after which
advanced period it could not be expected that he should live
long. From the silence, therefore, of my evidences it seems
probable that this extraordinary person finished his life in
peace, not long after, at his mansion of Temple. Gurdon' s
seal had for its device — a man with a helmet on his head,
drawing a cross-bow ; the legend, " Sigillum Ade de
Gurdon ; " his arms were, (( Goulis et iii floures argent issant
de testes de leopards."
If the stout and unsubmitting spirit of Gurdon could be
so much influenced by the belief and superstition of the
times, much more might the hearts of his ladies and
daughter. And accordingly we find that Amelia, by the
consent and advice of her sons, though said to be all under
age, makes a grant for ever of some lands down by the
stream at Durton ; and also of her right of the common of
Durton itself.2 Johanna, the daughter and heiress of Sir
Adam, was married, I find, to Eichard Achard; she also
grants to the prior and convent lands and tenements in the
village of Selborne, which her father obtained from Thomas
Makerel ; and all also her goods and chattels in Selborne
for the consideration of two hundred pounds sterling. This
last business was transacted in the first year of Edward II.
1 From the collection of Thomas Martin, Esq., in the Antiquarian
Repertory, vol. iii. p. 109, No. XXXI.— G. W.
2 Durton, now called Dorton, is still a common for the copyholders
of Selborne manor.— G. W.
446 ANTIQUITIES
viz. 1307. It lias been observed before that Gurdon had a
natural son : this person was called by the name of John
Dastard, alias Wastard, but more probably Bastard ; since
bastardy in those days was not deemed any disgrace, though
dastardy was esteemed the greatest. He was married to
Gunnorie Duncun; and had a tenement and some land
granted him in Selborne by his sister Johanna.
LETTER XI.
HE Knights Templars,1 who have been men-
tioned in a former letter, had considerable
property in Selborne ; and also a preceptory
at Sudington, now called Southington, a
hamlet lying one mile to the east of the vil-
Bishop Tanner mentions only two such houses of
1 The Military Orders of the Religious.
The Knights Hospitalars of St. John of Jerusalem, afterwards called
Knights of Rhodes, now of Malta, came into England about the year
1100, 1 Hen. I.
The Knights Templars came into England pretty early in Stephen's
reign, which commenced 1135. The order was dissolved in 1312, and
their estates given by act of Parliament to the Hospitalars in 1323, (all
in Edw. II.) though many of their estates were never actually enjoyed
by the said Hospitalars. — Vid. Tanner, p. xxiv. x.
The commandries of the Hospitalars, and preceptories of Templars,
were each subordinate to the principal house of their respective religion
in London. Although these are the different denominations, which
Tanner at p. xxviii. assigns to the cells of these different orders, yet
throughout the work very frequent instances occur of preceptories attri-
buted to the Hospitalars ; and if in some passages of Noiitia Monast.
commandries are attributed to the Templars, it is only where the place
afterwards became the property of the Hospitalars, and so is there
indifferently styled preceptory or commandry ; see pp. 243, 263, 276,
577, 678. But. to account for the first observed inaccuracy, it is pro-
bable the preceptories of the Templars, when given to the Hospitalars,
were still vulgarly, however, called by their old name of preceptories ;
whereas in propriety the societies of the Hospitalars were indeed (as
has been said) commandries. And such deviation from the strictness of
OF SEL BORNE. 447
the Templars in all the county of Southampton, viz. Godes-
field, founded by Henry de Blois, Bishop of Winches-
ter, and South Badeisley, a preceptory of the Knights Tem-
plars, and afterwards of St. John of Jerusalem, valued at
£118 16s. Id. per annum. Here then was a preceptory
unnoticed by antiquaries, between the village and Temple.
Whatever the edifice of the preceptory might have been, it
has long since been dilapidated ; and the whole hamlet
contains now only one mean farm-house, though there were
two in the memory of man.
It has been usual for the religious of different orders to
fall into great dissensions, and especially when they were
near neighbours. Instances of this sort we have heard of
between the monks of Canterbury ; and again between the
old abbey of St. Swythun, and the comparatively new
expression in this case might occasion those societies of Hospitalars also
to be indifferently called preceptories, which had originally been vested
in them, having never belonged to the Templars at all. — See in Archer,
p. 609. Tanner, p. 300, col. 1. 720, note e.
It is observable that the very statute for the dissolution of the Hos-
pitalars holds the same language ; for there, in the enumeration of
particulars, occur " commandries, preceptories." Codex, p. 1190. Now
this intercommunity of names, and that in an act of parliament too, made
some of our ablest antiquaries look upon a p»eceptory and commandry
as strictly synonymous ; accordingly we find Camden, in his Britannia,
explaining prceceptoria in the text by a commandry in the margin,
pp. 356, 510.
Commandry, a manor or chief messuage with lands, &c., belonging to
the priory of St. John of Jerusalem ; and he who had the government
of such house was called the commander, who could not dispose of it but
to the use of the priory, only taking thence his own sustenance, accord-
ing to his degree, who was usually a brother of the same priory. Cowell.
He adds (confounding these with preceptories) they are in many places
termed Temples, as Temple Bruere in Lincolnshire, &c. Preceptories
were possessed by the more eminent sort of Templars, whom the chief
master created and called Pr&ccptores Templi. Cowell, who refers to
Stephens de Jurisd. lib. 4. c. 10. num. 27.
Placita de juratis et assis coram Salom. de Roff et sociis suis justic.
Itiner. apud Wynton, &c. anno regni R. Edwardi fiL Reg. Hen.
octavo. — " et Magr. Milicie Templi in Angl. ht emendasse panis, & suis
[cerevisise] in Sodington, & nescint q°. war. et — et magist. Milicie
Templi non ven i5 distr. — Chapter House, Westminster. — G. W.
448 ANTIQUITIES
minster of Hyde in the city of Winchester.1 These feuds
arose probably from different orders being crowded within
the narrow limits of a city, or garrison- town, where every
inch of ground was precious, and an object of contention.
But with us, as far as my evidences extend, and while
Robert Saunford was master,2 and Eichard Carpenter was
preceptor, the Templars and the Priors lived in an inter-
course of mutual good offices.
My papers mention three transactions, the exact time of
which cannot be ascertained, because they fell out before
dates were usually inserted; though probably they happened
about the middle of the thirteenth century, not long after
Saunford became master. The first of these ih. that the
Templars shall pay to the priory of Selborne, annually, the
sum of ten shillings at two half yearly payments from their
chamber, " camera/' at Sudington, (t per manum preceptoris,
1 Notitia Monastica, p. 155.
" Winchester, Newminster. King Alfred founded here first only a
house and chapel for the learned monk Grimbald, whom he had brought
out of Flanders : but afterwards projected, and by his will ordered, a
noble church or religious house to be built in the cemetery on the north
side of the old minster or cathedral ; and designed that Grimbald should
preside over it. This was begun A.D. 901, and finished to the honour
01 the Holy Trinity, Virgin Mary, and St. Peter, by his son, King
Edward, who placed therein secular canons : but A.D. 963, they were
expelled, and an abbot and monks put in possession by Bishop Ethel-
wold.
*' Now the churches and habitations of these two societies being so
very near together, the differences which were occasioned by their sing-
ing, bells, and other matters, arose to so great a height, that the reli-
gious of the new monastery thought fit, about A.D. 1119, to remove to
a better and more quiet situation without the walls, on the north part of
the city called HYDE, where King Henry I. at the instance of Will.
Gifford, Bishop of Winton, founded a stately abbey for them. St. Peter
was generally accounted patron ; though it is sometimes called the
monastery of St. Grimbald, and sometimes of St. Barnabas," &c.
Note. A few years since a county bridewell, or house of correction,
has been built on the immediate site of Hyde Abbey. In digging up
the old foundations the workmen found the head of a crozier in good
preservation. — G. W.
2 Robert Saunforde was master of the Temple in 1241 ; Guido de
Foresta was the next in 1292. The former is fifth in a list of the
masters in a MS. Bib. Cotton. Nero. E. VI.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 449
vel ballivi nostri, qui pro tempore fuerit ibidem/' till they
can provide the prior and canons with an equivalent in
lands or rents within four or five miles of the said convent.
It is also further agreed, if the Templars shall be in arrears
for one year, that then the prior shall be empowered to
distrain upon their live stock in Bradeseth. The next
matter was a grant from Robert de Saunford to the priory
for ever, of a good and sufficient road, " cheminum," capable
of admitting carriages, and proper for the drift of their
larger cattle, from, the way which extends from Sudington
towards Blakemere, on to the lands which the convent pos-
sesses in Bradeseth.
The third transaction (though for want of dates we can-
not say which happened first and which last) was a grant
from Robert Saunford to the priory of a tenement and
its appurtenances in the village of Selborne, given to the
Templars by Americus de Vasci.1 This property, by the
manner of describing it, — ' ' totum tenementum cum omnibus
pertinentiis suis, scilicet in terris, & kominibw, in pratis &
pascuis, & nemoribus," &c., seems to have been no incon-
siderable purchase, and was sold for two hundred marks
sterling, to be applied for the buying of more land for the
support of the holy war.
Prior John is mentioned as the person to whom Vasci's
land is conveyed. But in Willis's list there is no Prior
John till 1339, several years after the dissolution of the
order of the Templars in 1312; so that unless Willis is
wrong, and has omitted a Prior John since 1262 (that being
the date of his first prior), these transactions must have
fallen out before that date.
I find not the least traces of any concerns between Gur-
don and the Knights Templars; but probably after his
death his daughter Johanna might have, and might bestow,
1 Americus Yasci, by his name, must have been an Italian, and had
been probably a soldier of fortune, and one of Gurdon's captains.
Americus Vespucio, the person who gave name to the new world, was
a Florentine.— G. W.
G G
450 ANTIQUITIES
Temple on that order in support of the holy land ; and,
moreover, she seems to have been moving from Selborne
when she sold her goods and chattels to the priory, as men-
tioned above.
Temple no doubt did belong to the knights, as may be
asserted, not only from its name, but also from another
corroborating circumstance of its being still a manor tithe-
free ; ' ' for, by virtue of their order/' says Dr. Blackstone,
" the lands of the Knights Templars were privileged by the
pope with a discharge from tithes."
Antiquaries have been much puzzled about the terms
preceptores and preceptorium, not being able to determine
what officer or edifice was meant. But perhaps all the
while the passage quoted above from one of my papers
f< per manum preceptoris vel ballivi nostri, qui pro tempore
fuerit ibidem," may help to explain the difficulty. For
if it be allowed here that preceptor and ballivus are synony-
mous words, then the brother who took on him that office
resided in the house of the Templars at Sudington, a pre-
ceptory ; where he was their preceptor, superintended their
affairs, received their money; and, as in the instance there
mentioned, paid from their chamber, " camera" as directed :
so that, according to this explanation, a preceptor was no
other than a steward, and a, preceptorium was his residence.
I am well aware that, according to strict Latin, the vel
should have been sen or sive, and the order of the words
(f preceptoris nostri, vel ballivi, qui" — et " ibidem" should
have been&t; ibidem necessarily having reference to two
or more persons : but it will hardly be thought fair to apply
the niceties of classic rules to the Latinity of the thirteenth
century, the writers of which seem to have aimed at nothing
farther than to render themselves intelligible.
There is another remark that we have made, which,
I think, corroborates what has been advanced; and that
is, that Richard Carpenter, preceptor of Sudington, at the
time of the transactions between the Templars and Selborne
Priory, did always sign last as a witness in the three deeds :
he calls himself f rater, it is true, among many other brothers,
OF SELBORNE. 451
but subscribes with a kind of deference, as if, for the time
being, his office rendered him an inferior in the commu-
nity.1
LETTER XII.
2 HE ladies and daughter of Sir Adam Gurdon
were not the only benefactresses to the Priory
of Selborne ; for, in the year 1281, Ela Long-
spee obtained masses to be performed for her
soul's health ; and the prior entered into an
engagement that one of the convent should every day say a
special mass for ever for the said benefactress, whether living
or dead. She also engaged within five years to pay to the
said convent one hundred marks of silver for the support
of a chantry and chantry- chaplain, who should perform his
masses daily in the parish church of Selborne.2 In the
east end of the south aisle there are two sharp -pointed
Gothic niches ; one of these probably was the place under
1 In two or three ancient records relating to St. Oswald's hospital in
the city of Worcester, printed by Dr. Nash, pp. 227 and 228 of his " Col-
lections for the History of Worcestershire," the words preceptorium and
preceptoria signify the mastership of the said hospital : " ad preceptorium
sive magisterium presentavit — preceptorii sive magisterii patronus. Va-
cavit dicta preceptoria seu magisterium — ad preceptoriam et regimen
dicti hospitalis — Te preceptorem sive magistrum prefecimus."
Where preceptorium denotes a building or apartment it may probably
mean the master's lodgings, or at least the preceptor's apartment, what-
soever may have been the office or employment of the said preceptor.
A preceptor is mentioned in Thoresby's " Ducatus Leodiensis, or
History of Leeds," p. 225, and a deed witnessed by the preceptor and
chaplain before dates were inserted. — Du Fresne's " Supplement :" "Prc-
ccptorice, praedia preceptoribus assign ata." — Cow ell, in his " Law Dic-
tionary," enumerates sixteen preceptorice, or preceptories, in England ;
but Sudington is not among them.— It is remarkable that Gurtlcrus, in
his " Ilistoria Templariorum," Amstel. 161)1, never once mentions the
words p receptor or preceptorium. — G. W.
2 A chantry >vas a chapel joined to some cathedral or parish church,
and endowed with annual revenues for the maintenance of one or more
priests to sing mass daily for the soul of the founder, and others. — G. W.
452 ANTIQUITIES
which these masses were performed; and there is the more
reason to suppose as much, because, till within these thirty
years, this space was fenced off with Gothic wooden railing,
and was known by the name of the south chancel.1
The solicitude expressed by the donor plainly shows her
piety and firm persuasion of the efficacy of prayers for the
dead ; for she seems to have made every provision for the
payment of the sum stipulated within the appointed time;
and to have felt much anxiety lest her death, or the neglect
of her executors or assigns, might frustrate her intentions. —
<{ Et si contingat me in solucione predicte pecunie annis
predictis in parte aut in toto deficere, quod absit ; concede
et oblige pro me et assignatis meis, quod Vice- Comes . . .
Oxon. et . . . qui pro tempore fuerint, per omnes terras et
tenernenta, et omnia bona mea mobilia et immobilia ubi-
cunque in balliva sua fuerint inventa ad solucionem pre-
dictam faciendam possent nos compellere." And again —
" Et si contingat dictos religiosos labores seu expensas
facere circa predictam pecuniam, seu circa partem dicte
pecunie ; volo quod dictorum religiosorum impense et
labores levantur ita quod predicto priori vel uni canoni-
corum suorum super hiis simplici verbo credatur sine al-
terius honere probacionis ; et quod utrique predictorum viro-
rum in unam marcam argenti pro cujuslibet distrincione
super me facienda tenear. — Dat. apud Wareborn die sabati
proxima ante festuin St. Marci evangeliste, anno regni regis
Edwardi tertio decimo/'2
But the reader perhaps would wish to be better informed
respecting this benefactress, of whom as yet he has heard
110 particulars.
The Ela Longspee therefore above-mentioned was a lady
1 For what is said more respecting this chantry see Letter III. of
these "Antiquities." — Mention is made of a Nicholas Langrish, capel-
lanus de Selborne, in the time of Henry VIII. Was he chantry-chaplain
to Ela Longspee, whose masses were probably continued to the time of
the Information ? More will be said of this person hereafter. — G. W.
2 Ancient deeds are often dated on a Sunday, having been executed
in churches and churchyards for the sake of notoriety, and for the con-
veniency of procuring several witnesses to attest. — G. W.
OF SELBOENE. 453
of high, birth and rank, and became countess to Thomas de
Newburgh, the sixth Earl of Warwick : she was the second
daughter of the famous Ela Longspee, Countess of Salis-
bury, by William Longspee, natural son of King Henry II.
by Rosamond.
Our lady, following the steps of her illustrious mother,1
" was a great benefactress to the university of Oxford, to
the canons of Oseney, the nuns of Godstow, and other
religious houses in Oxfordshire. She died very aged in
the year 1300,'2 and was buried before the high altar in the
abbey church of Oseney, at the head of the tomb of Henry
D'Oily, under a flat marble, on which was inlaid her portrai-
ture, in the habit of a vowess, engraved on a copper- plate/1
— Edmonson's " History and Genealogical Account of the
Grevilles/' p. 23.
LETTER XIII.
HE reader is here presented with five forms
respecting the choosing1 of a prior, but as
they are of some length they must be reserved
for the Appendix;3 their titles are No. 108,
(t Charta petens licentiam eligendi prelatum
a Domino episcopo Wintoniensi : " — ' ' Forma licentie con-
1 Ela Lonsgpee, Countess of Salisbury, in 1232, founded a monastery
at Lacock, in the county of Wilts, and also another at Hendon, in the
county of Somerset, in her widowhood, to the honour of the Blessed
Virgin and St. Bernard. (CAMDEN.)— Gr. W.
2 Thus she survived the foundation of her chantry at Selborne fifteen
years. About this lady and her mother consult Dugdale's " Baronage,"
i. 72, 175, 177.— Dug-dale's " Warwickshire," i. 383.— Leland's " Itin."
ii. 45.— G. W.
3 (Appendix, No. 108.)
Carta petens licentiam eligendi prelatum a Domino Episcopo Wintoniensi.
Defuncto prelato forma petendi licentiam eligendi.
"Domino et patri in Christo reverendo domino & P. Dei gratia Win-
toniensi episcopo, devoti sui filii supprior monasterii de S. Wintouiensis
454 ANTIQUITIES
cesse:" — " Forma decreti post electionem conficiendi:" —
" Modus procedendi ad electionem per formam scrutinii : ;' —
et " Forma ricte presentandi electum." Such, evidences
are rare and curious, and throw great light upon the general
dioceseos salutem cum subjectione humili, reverentiam, et honorem.
Monasterio nostro de S. in quo sub protectione vestra vivimus, sub habitu
regular!, Prioris solacio destitute per mortem bone memorie, &c. quondam
Prioris nostri, qui tali hora in aurora diem clausit extrenmin, vestre
paternitati reverende et dominationi precipue istum nostrum et nostri
monasterii casum flebilem cum merore nunciamus ; ad vestre paternitatis
refugium fratres nostros A. et C. canonicos destinantes, rogando et
petendo devote quatenus nobis dignemini licenciam tribuere, ut monas-
terio predicto, Prioris regimine destitute, providere possimus, invocata
Spiritus sancti gratia, per electionem canonicam de Priore. Actum in
monasterio predicto 5 kalend. &c. anno Domini, &c. Valeat reverenda
paternitas vestra semper in Domino."
Forma licencie concesse.
"P. Dei gratia Wintonien sis episcopus dilectis in Christo filiis suppriori
et conventui talis loci salutem, gratiam, et benedictionem. Viduitatem
monasterii vestri vacantis per mortem quondam K. Prioris vestri, cujus
anime propicietur altissimus, paterno compacientes affectu, petitam a
nobis eligendi licenciam vobis concedimus, ut patronus. Datum apud,
&c. 3 kalend. Jul. anno consecrationis nostre tertio."
Forma decreti post electionem conjiciendi.
" In nomine Domini nostri Jhesu Christi, Amen. Monasterio beate
Marie talis loci Winton. dioc. solacio destitute per mortem R. quondam
Prioris ipsius ; ac corpore ejus, prout moris est, ecclesiastice sepulture
commendato ; petita cum devocione licentia per fratres K. et . canonicos
a ven : in Christo patre et domino domino P. Dei gratia Winton iensi
episcopo ejusdem monasterii patrono, eligendi priorem, et optenta ; die
dato, a toto capitulo ad eligendum vocati fuere evocandi, qui debuerunt,
voluerunt, et potuerunt comode electioni prioris in monasterio predicto
interesse ; omnes canonici in capitulo ejusdem ecclesie convenerunt tali
die, anno Dom. &c. ad tractandum de electione sui prioris facienda; qui,
invocata Spiritus Sancti gratia, ad procedendum per formam scrutinii
concencientes."
(N. 108.) Modus procedendi ad electionem per formam scrutinii.
" Omnibus in capitulo congregatis qui debent volunt et possunt comode
interesse electioni eligendi sunt tres de capitulo* non nostro obediencias
ores,+ qui erunt scrutatores, et sedebunt in angulo capituli ; et primo
requirent vota sua propria, videlicet, duo requirent tertium et duo
* Fratres canonicos. See Forma decreti, $~c. — G. W.
f Obedientiores, sc. mure regular. In virtute obedientiae occurs in
Not. Visit.— G. W.
OF 8ELBORNE. 455
monastico- ecclesiastical history of this kingdom, not yet
sufficiently understood.
In the year 1324 there was an election for a prior at Sel-
borne ; when some difficulties occurring, and a devolution
alterum, &c. dicendo sic, ' Frater P. in quern concentis ad eligendum in
prelatum nostrum ? ' quibus examinatis, et dictis eorum per vicem ex
ipsis in scriptura redactis, vocabunt ad se omnes fratres singillatim,
primo suppriorem, &c. Et unus de tribus examinatoribus scribet
dictum cujuslibet. Celebrate scrutinio, publicare db coram omnibus.
Facta ptmodu concensum collectione apparebit in quern pars major capi-
tuli et sanior concentit; quo viso, major pars dicet minori, 'Cum major
pars et sanior capituli nostri concenciat in fratrem R. ipse est eligendus,
unde, si placet, ipsum coinmuniter eligamus ; ' si vero omnes acquie-
verint, tune ille qui majorem vocem habet in capitulo surgens dicet,
' Ego frater R. pro toto capitulo eligo fratrem R. nobis in pastorem ; '
et omnes dicent; * Placet nobis.' Et incipient, ' TE DEUM LAUDAMUS.'
Si vero in unum concordare nequiverint, tune hiis, qui majorem vocem
habet inter illos qui majorem et saniorem partem capituli constituerint,
dicet, ' Ego pro me et illis qui mecum concenciunt in fratrem R. eligo
ipsum in,' &c. Et illi dicent, ' Placet nobis,' &c."
Forma ricte presentandi electum.
" Reverendo in Christo patri et domino domino P. Dei gratia Winton.
episcopo devoti sui filii frater R. supprior couv'cntualis beate Marie
de tali loco, et ejusdem loci Conventus, cum subjectione humili, omnem
obedienciam, reverenciam, et honorem. Cum conventualie ecclesia beate
Marie talis loci, in qua sub protectione vestra vivimus sub habitu regu-
lari, per mortem felicis recordationis R. quondam prioria nostri destitr.ta
ecclesia priore, qui 6to kalend. Jul. in aurora anno Dom. &c. diem clausit
extremum ; de corpore ejus, prout moris est, ecclesiastice tradito sepul-
ture; petita a vobis, tanquam a Domino, et vero ejusdem ecclesie
patrono et pastore, licencia eligendi priorem et optenta ; convenientibus
omnibus canonicis predicte ecclesie in capitulo nostro, qui voluerunt
debuerunt et potuerunt comode electioni nostre interesse, tali die anno
Dom. supradicto, invocata Spiritus Sancti gratia, fratrem R. de C.
ejusdem ecclesie canonicum unanimi assensu et voluntate in priorem
nostrum, ex puris votis singulorum, unanimiter eligimus. Quern reve-
rende paternitati vestre et dominacioni precipue Priorem vero patrono
nostro et pastore confirmandum, si placet, tenore presentium presenta-
mus ; dignitatem vestram humiliter et devote rogantes, quatenus, dicte
electioni felicem prebere volentes assensum, eidem R. electo nostro nunc
confirmabitis, et quod vestrum est pastorali solicitudine impendere
dignemini. In cujus rei testiinonium presentes litteras sigillo capituli
nostri signatas paternitati vestre transmitlimus. Valeat reverenda
paternitas vestre semper in Domino. Datum tali loco die et anno
supradictis. Omnes et singuli, per iratres A. B. et C. ejusdem ecclesie
456 ANTIQUITIES
taking1 place, application was made to Stratford, who was
Bishop of Winchester at that time, and of course the visitor
and patron of the convent at the spot above-mentioned.1
AN EXTRACT FROM REG. STRATFORD. WINTON.
P. 4. " Commissio facta sub-priori de Selebourne " by
the bishop, enjoining him to preserve the discipline of the
order in the convent during the vacancy made by the late
death of the prior, ("nuper pastoris solatio destituta/')
dated 4to. kal. Maii. ann. 2do sc. of his consecration, [sc.
1324.]
P. 6. <f Custodia Prioratus de Seleburne vacantis," com-
mitted by the bishop to Nicholas de la . . ., a layman, it
belonging to the bishop " ratione vacationis ejusdem," in
July, 1324. Ibid. " Negotium electionis de Selebourne.
Acta coram Johanne Episcopo, &c. 1324 innegotio electionis
de fratre Waltero de Insula concanonico prioratus de Sele-
bourne," lately elected by the sub-prior and convent, by
way of scrutiny ; that it appeared to the bishop, by certi-
ficate from the Dean of Alton, that solemn citation and
canonicos de voluntate tocius conventus ad inquirenda vota singulorum
constitutes, secreto et singillatim requisiti ; tandem publicato scrutinio
et facta votorum colectione inventum est, majorem et saniorem partem
tocius capituli dicte ecclesie in fratrem S. de B. dicte ecclesie canonicum
unanimiter et concorditer concencisse ; vel sic, quando inventum omnes
canonicos dicte ecclesie preter duos in fratrem, A. D. quibus statim
major! parti eligendum adquiescenter : frater k. stipprior ecclesie me-
morate, juxta potestatem sibi a toto conventu traditam, vice consociorurn
suorum et sua ac tocius conventus, dictum fratrem S. de B. in priorem
ejusdem ecclesie elegit, sub liac forma; 'Ego frater supprior conven-
tualis ecclesie beate Marie talis loci, potestate et auctoritate mihi a toto
conventu dicte ecclesie tradita et commissa, quando, puplicato scrutinio
et omnibus circa hoc rite peractis, inveni majorem et partem saniorem
tocius capituli nostri in fratrem S. de B. virum providum unanimiter
concencisse, ipsum nobis et ecclesie nostre, vice tocius conventus, in
priorem eligendum ; et eidem election! subscribe ; cui election! omnes
canonici nostri concencerunt, et subscripserunt.' — ' Ego frater de C.
present! electioni concencio, et subscribe.' Et sic de singulis electo-
ribus ; in cujus rei testimonium sigillum capituli nostri apponi fecimus
ad presentes."— G. W.
1 Stratford was Bishop of Winchester from 1323 to 1333, when Lo
was translated to Canterbury. — G. W.
OF SELBOENE. 457
proclamation had been made in the church of the convent
where the election was held, that any who opposed the said
election or elected should appear. Some difficulties were
started, which the bishop overruled, and confirmed the
election, and admitted the new prior sub hac forma :
" In Dei nomine Amen. Ego Johannes permissione
divina, &c. te Walterum de Insula ecclesie de Selebourne
nostre dioceseos nostrique patronatus vacantis, canonicum
et cantorem, virum utique providum, et discretum, literarum
scientia preditum, vita moribus et conversatione merito
commendatum, in ordine sacerdotali et etate legitima con-
stitutum, de legitimo matrimonio procreatum, in ordine et
religione Sancti Augustini de Selebourne expresse pro-
fessum, in spiritualibus et temporalibus circumspectum,
jure nobis hac vice devoluto in hac parte, in dicte ecclesie
de Selebourne prefectum priorem ; curam et administra-
tion em ejusdem tibi in spiritualibus et temporalibus com-
mittentes. Dat. apud Selebourne XIII kalend. Augusti
anno supradicto."
There follows an order to the sub-prior and convent pro
obedientia :
A mandate to Nicholas above-named to release the Priory
to the new prior :
A mandate for the induction of the new prior.
LETTER XIY.
N the year 1373 Wykeham, Bishop of Win-
chester, held a visitation of his whole diocese;
not only of the secular clergy through the
several deaneries, but also of the monasteries,
and religious houses of all sorts, which he
visited in person. The next year he sent his commissioners
with power to correct and reform the several irregularities
and abuses which he had discovered in the course of his
visitation.
458 ANTIQUITIES
" Some years afterward, the bishop having visited three
several times all the religious houses throughout his diocese,
and being well informed of the state and condition of each,
and of the particular abuses which required correction and
reformation, besides the orders which he had already given,
and the remedies which he had occasionally applied by his
commissioners, now issued his injunctions to each of them.
They were accommodated to their several exigencies, and
intended to correct the abuses introduced, and to recall
them all to a strict observation of the rules of their respec-
tive orders. Many of these injunctions are still extant, and
are evident monuments of the care and attention with which
he discharged this part of his episcopal duty."1
Some of these injunctions I shall here produce ; and
they are such as will not fail, I think, to give satisfaction to
the antiquary, both as never having been published before,
and as they are a curious picture of monastic irregularities
at that time.
The documents that I allude to are contained in the
Notabilis Visitatio de Seleburne, held at the Priory of that
place, by Wykeham in person, in the year 1387.
This evidence, in the original, is written on two skins of
parchment ; the one large, and the other smaller, and con-
sists of a preamble, thirty-six items, and a conclusion, which
altogether evince the patient investigation of the visitor,
for which he had always been so remarkable in all matters of
moment, and how much he had at heart the regularity of
those institutions, of whose efficacy in their prayers for the
dead he was so firmly persuaded. As the bishop was so
much in earnest, we may be assured that he had nothing in
view but to correct and reform what he found amiss ; and
was undur no bias to blacken or misrepresent, as the com-
missioners of Thomas Lord Cromwell seem in part to have
done at the time of the reformation.2 We may thert'lore
with reason suppose that the bishop gives us an exact de-
1 See "Lowth's Life of Wykeham."— G. W.
2 Letters of this sort from Dr. Layton to Thomas Lord Cromwell, are
still extant.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 459
lineation of the morals and manners of the canons of Sel-
borne at that juncture : and that what he found they had
omitted he enjoins them; and for what they have done
amiss, and contrary to their rules and statutes, he reproves
them; and threatens them with punishment suitable to their
irregularities.
This visitatio is of considerable length, and cannot be
introduced into the body of this work ; l we shall therefore
take some notice, and make some remarks, on the most
singular items as they occur.
In the preamble the visitor says — " Considering the
charge lying upon us, that your blood may not be required
at our hands, we caine down to visit your Priory, as our
office required : and every time we repeated our visitation
we found something still not only contrary to regular rules
but also repugnant to religion and good reputation."
In the first article after the preamble — "he commands
them on their obedience, and on pain of the greater excom-
munication, to see that the canonical hours by night and by
day be sung in their choir, and the masses of the Blessed
Mary, and other accustomed masses, be celebrated at the
proper hours with devotion, and at moderate pauses ; and
that it be not allowed to any to absent themselves from the
hours and masses, or to withdraw before they are finished."
Item 2d. He enjoins them to observe that silence to
which they are so strictly bound by the rule of St. Au-
gustine at stated times, and wholly to abstain from frivolous
conversation.
[Item 3rd. That whereas, although in health, they have
many times neglected the celebration of masses, and have
thereby defrauded the souls of the founders and other
benefactors; he enjoins them to confess frequently, and
devoutly to celebrate mass, as well for the living as the
1 It was printed entire in an Appendix to the first edition : but as
the principal items have been abstracted in the text by Gilbert White
and as the heads of the remaining items are now given [between
brackets] by the editor, it has been judged unnecessary to reprint here,
verbatim, an article of such considerable length. — ED.
460 ANTIQUITIES
dead, as often as may be. If any impediment occur to
prevent the celebration, they are to report it within three
days to the prior ; who is also required to search diligently
every month into breaches of this rule, and to punish the
delinquents.]
Item 4th. "Not to permit such frequent passing of
secular people of both sexes through their convent, as if a
thoroughfare, from whence many disorders may and have
arisen/'
Item 5th. " To take care that the doors of their church
and Priory be so attended to that no suspected and dis-
orderly females, ' suspectse et alise inhonestae/ pass through
their choir and cloister in the dark ; " and to see that the
doors of their church between the nave and the choir, and
the gates of their cloister opening into the fields, be
constantly kept shut until their first choir-service is over in
the morning, at dinner time, and when they meet at their
evening collation.1
Item 6th mentions that several of the canons are found
to be very ignorant and illiterate, and enjoins the prior to
see that they be better instructed by a proper master.
[Item 7th. The decretals concerning their order are not
read, on which account they, in consequence of their ignor-
ance of them, to the peril of their souls act in a manner
therein expressly forbidden. Wherefore they are required
to have these decretals written in a volume, and read twice
a year in the chapter for the information of the seniors ; and
to have them explained, in the vulgar, to the novices, so
that they may know them as it were by heart. This chauge
is laid upon the prior, under pain of suspension.]
Item 8th. The canons are here accused of refusing to
accept of their statutable clothing year by year, and of
demanding a certain specified sum of money, as if it were
their annual rent and due. This the bishop forbids, and
orders that the canons shall be clothed out of the revenue
of the Priory, and the old garments be laid by in a chamber
1 A collation was a meal or repast on a fast day, in lieu of a supper
-G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 431
and given to the poor, according to the rule of St. Au-
gustine.
In Item 9th is a complaint that some of the canons are
given to wander out of the precincts of the convent without
leave ; and that others ride to their manors and farms,
under pretence of inspecting the concerns of the society,
when they please, and stay as long as they please. But
they are enjoined never to stir either about their own
private concerns or the business of the convent without
leave from the prior ; and no canon is to go alone, but to
have a grave brother to accompany him.
The injunction in Item 10th, at this distance of time,
appears rather ludicrous ; but the visitor seems to be very
serious on the occasion, and says that it has been evidently
proved to him that some of the canons, living dissolutely
after the flesh, and not after the spirit, sleep naked in their
beds without their breeches and shirts, " absque femoralibus
et camisiis." * He enjoins that these culprits shall be
punished by severe fasting, especially if they shall be found
to be faulty a third time ; and threatens the prior and sub-
prior with suspension if they do not correct this enormity.
In Item llth the good bishop is very wroth with some of
the canons, whom he finds to be professed hunters and
sportsmen, keeping hounds, and publicly attending hunting-
matches. These pursuits, he says, occasion much dissipation,
danger to the soul and body, and frequent expense; he,
therefore, wishing to extirpate this vice wholly from the
convent, " radicibus extirpare" does absolutely enjoin the
canons never intentionally to be present at any public noisy
tumultuous huntings ; or to keep any hounds, by themselves
or by others, openly or by stealth, within the convent, or
without.'2
1 The rule alluded to in Item 10th, of not sleeping naked, was en-
joined the Knights Templars, who also were subject to the rules of St.
Augustine. — See Gurtleri Hist. Templariorum. — Gr. W.
2 Considering the strong propensity in human nature towards the
pleasures of the chase, it is not to be wondered that the canons of Scl-
borne should languish after hunting, when, from their situation so near
the precincts of Wolrner Forest, the king's hounds mast have been often
402 ANTIQUITIES
In Item 12th he forbids the canons in office to make their
business a plea for not attending the service of the choir ;
since by these means either divine worship is neglected, or
their brother canons are overburdened.
[Item 13th directs that two of the canons shall twice
in every year personally visit the manors, and report in
writing their condition and the live ancf dead stock at each ;
that in case of the death of any officer, the convent may
not be left in ignorance as to the state of his charge ;
neglect to be severely punished, according to the bishop's
discretion.]
By Item 14th we are informed that the original number
of canons at the Priory of Selborne was fourteen ; but that
at this visitation they were found to be let down to eleven.
The visitor therefore strongly and earnestly enjoins them
that, with all due speed and diligence, they should proceed
to the election of proper persons to fill up the vacancies,
under pain of the greater excommunication.
[Item 15th is especially addressed to the prior,, who has
neglected to make inquisition as to proprietary canons,
" whence it has resulted that the old enemy, taking advan-
tage of the continued sloth of the shepherd, has seduced the
wretched and erring sheep by means of the snare of pro-
perty into the thirst of avarice," to the serious peril of their
souls. He is required, twice a year at least, to make
inquisition and to punish offenders. In neglect of this duty
he is ipso facto suspended.
[Item 16th refers to the constitutions as requiring that
abbots and priors, and other officers, should twice at least
in oach year, in the presence of the whole convent, or of a
certain number deputed by the chapter, render a full account
of their administration; and avers that this has not been
attended to in the Priory of Selborne. Requires that it be
observed in future, under pain of suspension.]
In Item 17th, the prior and canons are accused of suffer-
in hearing, and sometimes in sight from their windows. If the bishop
was so offended at these sporting canons, what would he have said to
our modern fox-hunting divines? — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 4G3
ing, through neglect, notorious dilapidations to take place
among their manorial houses and tenements, and in the
-walls and enclosures of the convent itself, [sumptuously
erected by the industry of their predecessors,] to the shame
and scandal of the institution : they are therefore enjoined,
under pain of suspension, to repair all defects within the
space of six months.
Tfem 18th. Charges them with grievously burdening the
said Priory by means of sales, and grants of liveries,1 and
corrodies.2
The bishop, in item 19th, accuses the canons of neg-
lect and omission with respect to their perpetual chantry-
services.
Item 20th. Tbo visitor here conjures the prior and
canons not to withhold their original alms, " eleemosynas ; "
nor those that they were enjoined to distribute for the good
of the souls of founders and benefactors; he also strictly
orders that the fragments and broken victuals, both from
the hall of their prior and their common refectory, should
be carefully collected together by their eleemosynarius, and
given to the poor without any diminution ; the officer to be
suspended for neglect or omission.
[Item 21st. It could scarcely be anticipated that it
should have been necessary to enjoin that the brethren
should be supplied, when sick, with suitable food and drink,
and with fitting medicines, out of the common stock, " sicut
antiquitus fieri consueverat ;" and have also the use of the
rooms of the infirmary: yet such is the tenor of this item.
It appears as though some one had claimed for himself a
property in the infirmary, to the exclusion of the others.]
1 " Liberations s, or liberaturce, allowances of corn, &c., to servants,
•'nUvered at certain times, and in certain quantities, as clothes were,
among the allowances from religious houses to their dependants. — See
the corrodies granted by Croyland abbey. — " Hist, of Croyland," Ap-
pendix, No. XXXIV.
" It is not improbable that the word in after ages came to be confined
to the uniform of the retainers or servants of the great, who were hence
called livery servants." — Sir John Cullum's " Hist, of Hawsted." — G.W.
2 A corrody is an allowance to a servant living in an abbey or priory.
— G. W.
464 ANTIQUITIES
[Item 22nd. Since negligence or remissness towards
offenders is in itself detestable, and since facility of pardon
operates as an incentive to delinquency ; orders that, with-
out exception of persons, correction shall be used according
to the amount of the delinquency ; and that the regular
observances shall be duly kept.]
Item 23d. He bids them distribute their pittances,
€t pitancias"1 regularly on obits, anniversaries, festivals, &c.
[Item 24th. Prohibits the sale of wood, the farming out
of manors or of churches, or the transaction of any other
important business, without consultation and consent of
the whole convent, or of the larger and discreeter portion
of it : otherwise there is no validity in the proceeding.
" Ilia quoque que omnes tangunt ab omnibus merito debeant
approbari."]
Item 25th. All and every one of the canons are hereby
inhibited from standing godfather to any boy for the future,
"ne compatres alicujus pueri de cetero fieri presumatis,"
unless by express license from the bishop obtained ; because
from such relationship favour and affection, nepotism, and
undue influence, arise, to the injury and detriment of reli-
gious institutions.2
Item 26th. The visitor herein severely reprimands the
canons for appearing publicly in what would be called in
the universities an unstatutable manner, and for wearing of
1 " Pitancia, an allowance of bread and beer, or other provision to
any pious use, especially to the religious in a monastery, &c., for aug-
mentation of their commons." — " Gloss, to Rennet's Par. An tiq." — G. W.
2 " The relationship between sponsors and their god-children, who
were called spiritual sons and daughters, was formerly esteemed much
more sacred than at present. The presents at christenings were some-
times very considerable : the connexion lasted through life, and was closed
with a legacy. This last mark of attention seems to have been thought
almost indispensable : for, in a will, from whence no extracts have been
given, the testator left every one of his god-children a bushel of barley."
—Sir John Culluin s " Hist, of Hawsted." — G. W.
" D. Margaretae filiae Regis primogenitae, quam JUiolam, quia cjus in
baptismo compaler fuit, appellat, cyphum aureum et quadraginta libras,
legavit." — Archbishop Parker " de Antiquitate Eccles. Brit." speaking
of Archbishop Morton. — G. W
OF SELBORNE. 4C5
boots, (t caligae de Burneto, et sot'jdarium — in ocrearum
loco, ad modum gotnlarium.Ml
It is remarkable that the bishop expresses more warmth
against this than any other irregularity; and strictly en-
joins them, under pain of ecclesiastical censures, and even
imprisonment if necessary (a threat not made use of before)
for the future to wear boots, " ocreis seu botis," according
to the regular usage of their ancient order.
[Item 27th. Requires that, according to the constitutions,
three or at the least two parts of the convent should daily
eat together in the refectory; and forbids all dining in
private places, with certain exceptions. One of the pri-
vileged places is the " aula prioris :" but the prior is desired
to use due diligence that, without exception of persons, he
invite sometimes one and sometimes another of those whom
he knows to be most in need.]
[Item 28th. That as the lives of the younger members of
the community are watched over by the seniors, so also the
seniors are required by the constitutions to have witnesses
of their proceedings. Enjoins that the prior should annually
change his chaplain ; both with the view of securing greater
efficiency in the discharge of the duties, and in order that
he might have ready an unsuspected witness respecting him,
in the event of any scandal or imputation being cast upon
him by malice.]
Item 29th. He here again, but with less earnestness,
forbids them foppish ornaments, and the affectation of ap-
pearing like beaux with garments edged with costly furs,
with fringed gloves, and silken girdles trimmed with gold
1 Du Fresne is copious on caligce of several sorts. " Hoc item de
Clericis, presertim beneficiatis : ' caligis scacatis (chequered) rubies, et
viridibus publice utentibus dicimus esse censendum." — Statut. Eccles.
Tutel. The chequered boots seem to be the Highland plaid stockings.
" Burnetum, i. e. Brunetum, pannus non ex land nativi coloris confec-
tus." — " Sotularium, i. e. subtalaris, quia sub talo est. Peculium genus,
quibus maxime Monachi nocte utebantur in restate ; in hyeme vero
Soccis."
This writer gives many quotations concerning Sotularia, which were
not to be too shapely ; nor were the caligce to be laced on too nicely.
— G. W.
H H
465 ANTIQUITIES
and silver. It is remarkable that no punishment is annexed
to this injunction.
[Item 30th. The bishop appears to have believed in the
vulgar adage that what is every body's business is nobody's
business ; and probably attributed to this cause much of
the disorder that prevailed. He here remarks that as each
office ought to be committed to a special officer, he requires
that to be done for the future : such officers to be elected
according to the custom of the Priory. The penalty for
disobedience in this case is no less than excommunication.]
Item 31st. He here singly and severally forbids each
canon not admitted to a cure of souls to administer ex-
treme unction, or the sacrament, to clergy or laity, or to
perform the service of matrimony, till he has taken out the
licence of the parish priest.
Item 32nd. The bishop says in this item that he had
observed and found, in his several visitations, that the
sacramental plate and cloths of the altar, surplices, &c. were
sometimes left in such an uncleanly and disgusting condi-
tion as to make the beholders shudder with horror ; — " quod
aliquibus sunt horrori;1" he therefore enjoins them for the
future to see that the plate, cloths, and vestments be kept
bright, clean, and in decent order ; and, what must surprise
the reader, adds — that he expects for the future that the
sacrist should provide for the sacrament good wine, pure
and unadulterated ; and not, as had often been the practice,
that which was sour, and tending to decay : — he says farther,
that it seems quite preposterous to omit in sacred matters
cthat attention to decent cleanliness, the neglect of which
would disgrace a common convivial meeting.
" lie turpe toral, ne sordida mappa
Corruget nares ; nc non et caritharus, et lanx
Ostendat tibi tc "
Item 33d says that, though the relics of saints, the plate,
1 " Men abhorred the offering of the Lord." — 1 Sam. chap. ii. v. 17,
Strange as this account may appear to modern delicacy, the autlior,
when first in orders, twice met with similar circumstances attending the
sacrament at two churches belonging to two obscure villages. In the
first he found the inside of the chalice covered with birds' dung : and in
OF SELBORNE. 467
holy vestments, and books of religious houses, are forbidden
by canonical institutes to be pledged or lent out upon pawn ;
yet, as the visitor finds this to be the case in his several
visitations, he therefore strictly enjoins the prior forthwith
to recall those pledges, and to restore them to the convent ;
and orders that all the papers and title deeds thereto
belonging should be safely deposited, and kept under throe
locks and keys.
[Item 34th. That as religious men ought continually to
be advancing in holiness, he enjoins them when they have
performed the observances of their order and regular disci-
pline, to frequent the cloisters for the reading of the holy
scriptures and for devout contemplation.]
[Item 35th. A special injunction to the prior, exempli-
fying the hospitality that prevailed in monastic establish-
ments. That when any relation of any of the canons should
come on a visit to him, his reception should be liberal
according to his condition : suggesting, however, that the
brethren should avoid being overburthensome to the Priory
in such matters.]
[Item 36th. It avails but little to make laws unless atten-
tion is paid to their execution. In order that they may by
frequent hearing be impressed on the most treacherous
memories, and that no one may pretend ignorance of them ;
enjoins and orders that these injunctions and the before-
mentioned decrees shall be written in a volume, and all and
singular of them be read fully in the province of the whole
convent twice in every year. Eequires observance of all
of them under penalties. Finally, reserves to himself the
power of altering in any way either the injunctions or the
penalties.]
In the course of the Yisitatio Notabilis the constitutions
of Legate Ottobonus are frequently referred to. Ottobonus
was afterwards Pope Adrian Y. and died in 1276. His
the other the communion-cloth soiled with cabbage and the greasy
drippings of a gammon of bacon. The good dame at the great farm-
house, who was to furnish the cloth, being a notable woman, thought it
best to save her clean linen, and so sent a foul cloth that had covered
her own table for two or three Sundays before. — G. W
468 ANTIQUITIES
constitutions are in Lyndewood's Provincial, and were
drawn up in the 52nd of Henry III.
In the Visitatio N otabilis the usual punishment is fasting
on bread and beer; and in cases of repeated delinquency
on bread and water. On these occasions quarto, feria, et
sexta feria, are mentioned often, and are to be understood
of the days of the week numerically on which such punish-
ment is to be inflicted.
LETTER XV.
HOUGH Bishop Wykeham appears somewhat
stern and rigid in his visitatorial character
towards the Priory of Selborne, yet he was
on the whole a liberal friend and benefactor
to that convent, which, like every society or
individual that fell in his way, partook of the generosity
and benevolence of that munificent prelate.
In the year 1377, William of Wykeham, out of his
mere good will and liberality, discharged the whole debts
of the prior and convent of Selborne, to the amount of one
hundred and ten marks eleven shillings and sixpence ; 1 and,
a few years before he died, he made a free gift of one hun-
dred marks to the same priory : on which account the prior
and convent voluntarily engaged for the celebration of two
masses a day by two canons of the convent for ten years,
for the bishop's welfare, if he should live so long ; and for
his soul if he should die before the expiration of this term.2
At this distance of time it seems matter of great wonder
to us how these societies, so nobly endowed, and whose
members were exempt by their very institution from every
means of personal and family expense, could possibly run
in debt without squandering their revenues in a manner
incompatible with their function.
1 Yet in ten years' time we find, by the Xotabilis Visitatio, that all
their relics, plate, vestments, title deeds, &c., were in pawn. — G. \V.
5 Lowth's " Life of Wykehain."— G. W.
OF SELBORNE, 469
Religious houses might sometimes be distressed in their
revenues by fires among their buildings, or large dilapida-
tions from storms, &c. ; but no such accident appears to
have befallen the Priory of Selborne. Those situate on
public roads, or in great towns, where there were shrines
of saints, were liable to be intruded on by travellers, de-
votees, and pilgrims; and were subject to the importunity
of the poor, who swarmed at their gates to partake of doles
and broken victuals. Of these disadvantages some convents
used to complain, and especially those at Canterbury; but
this priory, from its sequestered situation, could seldom be
subject to either of these inconveniences, and therefore we
must attribute its frequent debts and embarrassments, well
endowed as it was, to the bad conduct of its members, and
a general inattention to the interests of the institution.
LETTER XVI.
EAUFORT was Bishop of Winchester from
1405 to 1447; and yet, notwithstanding this
long episcopate, only torn. i. of Beaufort's
Register is to be found. This loss is much
to be regretted, as it must unavoidably make
a gap in the History of Selborne Priory, and perhaps in the
list of its priors.
In 1410 there was an election for a prior, and again in
1411.
In vol. i. p. 24, of Beaufort's Register, is the instrument
of the election of John Wynchestre to be prior — the sub-
stance as follows : —
Richard Elstede, senior canon, signifies to the bishop
that brother Thomas Weston, the late prior, died October
18th,1410, and was buried November llth. That the bishop's
license to elect having been obtained, he and the whole
convent met in the chapter-house, on the same day, about
the hour of vespers, to consider of the election : — that
brother John Wynchestre, then sub-prior, with the general
470 ANTIQUITIES
consent, appointed the 12th of November, ad horam ejusdem
diei capitularem, for the business: — when they met in the
chapter-house, post missam de sancto Spiritu, solemnly
celebrated in the church ; — to wit, Richard Elstede ; Thomas
Halyborne; John Lemyngton, sacrista; John Stepe, cantor;
Walter Ffarnham ; Richard Putworth, celerarius ; Hugh
London; Henry Brampton, alias Brompton; John Wyn-
chestre, senior ; John Wynchestre, junior ; — then " pro-
posito primitus verbo Dei," and then ' ' ympno Veni Creator
Spiritus" being solemnly sung, cum " versiculo et oratione,"
as usual, and his letter of license, with the appointment of
the hour and place of election, being read, alta voce, in valvis
of the chapter-house ; — John Wynchestre, senior, the sub-
prior, in his own behalf and that of all the canons, and by
their mandate, " quasdam monicionem et protestacionem in
scriptis redactas fecit, legit, et interposuit" — that all persons
disqualified, or not having right to be present, should im-
mediately withdraw; and protesting against their voting,
&c. — that then having read the constitution of the general
council " Quia propter/' and explained the modes of pro-
ceeding to election, they agreed unanimously to proceed
" per viam seu formam simplicis compromissi ;" when John
Wynchestre, sub-prior, and all the others (the commissaries
under-named excepted) named and chose brothers Richard
Elstede, Thomas Halyborne, John Lemyngton the sacrist,
John Stepe, chantor, and Richard Putworth, canons, to be
commissaries, who were sworn each to nominate and elect
a fit person to be prior; and empowered by letters patent
under the common seal, to be in force only until the dark-
ness of the night of the same day; — that they, or the greater
part of them, should elect for the whole convent, within the
limited time, from their own number, or from the rest of
the convent; — that one of them should publish their con-
sent in common before the clergy and people : — they then
all promised to receive as prior the person these five canons
should fix on. The commissaries seceded from the chapter-
house to the refectory of the Priory, and were shut in with
master John Penkester, bachelor of laws ; and John Couke
and John Lynne, perpetual vicars of the parish churches
OF SELBOENE. 471
of Newton and Selborne ; and with Sampson Maycock, a
public notary ; where they treated of the election ; when
they unanimously agreed on John Wynchestre, and ap-
pointed Thomas Halyborne, to choose him in common for
all, and to publish the election, as customary ; and returned
long before it was dark to the chapter-house, where Thomas
Halyborne read publicly the instrument of election ; when
all the brothers, the new prior excepted, singing solemnly
the hymn " Te Deum laudamus," fecerunt deportari novum
electum y by some of the brothers, from the chapter-house to
the high altar of the church ; 1 and the hymn being sung,
didisque v&'siculo et oratione consuetis in hac parte, Thomas
Halyborne, moss tune ibidenij before the clergy and people
of both sexes solemnly published the election in vulgari.
Then Richard Elstede, and the whole convent by their proc-
tors and nuncios appointed for the purpose, Thomas Haly-
borne and John Stepe, required several times the assent of
the elected ; " et tandem post diutinas interpellations, et
deliberationein providam penes se habitam, in hac parte
divine nolens, ut asseruit, resistere voluntati," within the
limited time he signified his acceptance in the usual written
form of words. The bishop is then supplicated to confirm
their election, and do the needful, under common seal, in
the chapter-house. November 14, 1410.
The bishop, January 6, 1410, apud Esher in camera
inferiorij declared the election duly made, and ordered
the new prior to be inducted — for this the Archdeacon
of Winchester was written to : " stallumque in choro,
et locum in capitulo juxta morem preteriti temporis,"
to be assigned him ; and every thing beside necessary to
bo done.
BEAUFORT'S REGISTER, VOL. i.
P. 2. Taxatio spiritualis Decanatus de Aulton, Ecclesia
1 It seems here as if the canons used to chair their new elected prior
from the chapter-house to the high altar of their convent church. In
Letter XXI. on the same occasion, it is said — "et sic canentes dictum
electum ad majus altare ecclesie deduximus, ut apud nos moris est." —
G. W.
472 ANTIQUITIES
de Selebourn, cum Capella, — xxx marc, decima x lib. iii sol.
Vicaria de Selebourn non taxatur propter exilitatem.
P. 9. Taxatio bonorum temporalium religiosorum in
Archidiac. Wynton.
Prior de Selebourn habet maneria de
Brondene taxat. ad xxx s. ii d.
Apud Schete ad xvii s.
P. Selebourne ad vi lib.
In civitate Wynton de reddit . . vi lib. viii ob.
Tannaria sua taxat. ad . . . . x lib. s.
Summa tax. xxxviii lib. xiiii d. ob. Inde decima vi lib.
s. q. ob.
LETTER XVII.
1NFORMATION being sent to Borne re-
specting the havock and spoil that was
carrying on among the revenues and lands
of the Priory of Selborne, as we may suppose
by the Bishop of Winchester, its visitor, Pope
Martin/ as soon as the news of these proceedings came
before him, issued forth a bull, in which he enjoins his
commissary immediately to revoke all the property that had
been alienated.
In this instrument his holiness accuses the prior and
canons of having granted away (they themselves and their
predecessors) to certain clerks and laymen their tithes,
lands, rents, tenements, and possessions, to some of them
for their lives, to others for an undue term of years, and to
some again for a perpetuity, to the great and heavy detri-
ment of the monastery ; and these leases were granted, he
continues to add, under their own hands, with the sanction
1 Pope Martin V. chosen about 1417. He attempted to reform the
church, but died in 1431, just as he had summoned the council of Basle.
— G. W.
OF SELBOBNE. 473
of an oatliand the renunciation of all rights and claims, and
under penalties, if the right was not made good. But it
will be best to give an abstract from the bull.
N". 298. Pope Martin's bull, touching the revoking of
certain things alienated from the Priory of Seleburne. Pon-
tif. sui ann. 1.
"Martinus Bps. servus servorum Dei. Dilecto fiho
Priori de Suthvale 1 Wyntonien. dioc. Salutem & apos-
tolicam ben. Ad audientiam nostram pervenit quam tarn
dilecti filii prior et conventus monasterii de Seleburn per
Priorem soliti gubernari ordinis Stl. Augustini Winton.
dioc. quam de predecessores eorum deciuias, terras, redditus,
domos, possessiones, vineas,2 et quedain alia bona ad monas-
terium ipsum spectantia, datis super hoc litteris, inter-
positis juramentis, factis renuntiationibus, et penis adjectis,
in gravem ipsius monasterii lesionem, nonnullis clericis et
laicis, aliquibus eorum ad vitam, quibusdam vero ad non
modicum temp us, & aliis perpetuo ad firmam, vel sub censu
annuo concesserunt ; quorum aliqui dicunt super hiis a sede
aplica in communi forma confirmationis litteras impetrasse.
Quia vero nostri interest lesis monasteriis sub venire — [He
the Pope here commands] — ea ad jus et proprietatem mo-
nasterii studeas legitime revocare/'' &c.
The conduct of the religious had now for some time been
generally bad. Many of the monastic societies, being very
opulent, were become voluptuous and licentious, and had
deviated entirely from their original institutions. The
laity saw with indignation the wealth and possessions of
their pious ancestors perverted to the service of sensuality
1 Should have been no doubt Southwick, a priory under Portsdowi*
— G. W.
2 Mr. Barrington is of opinion that anciently the English vinea was
in almost every instance an orchard ; not perhaps always of apples
merely, but of other fruits ; as cherries, plums, and currants. We stili
say a plum or cherry-orchard. — See Vol. III. of Archseologia.
In the instance above the pope's secretary might insert vineas merely
because they were a species of cultivation familiar to him in Italy. —
G. W.
Orchard, says Mr. Bennett, is, properly speaking, merely a garden :
q. d. wort-yard. — ED.
474 ANTIQUITIES
and indulgence, and spent in gratifications highly unbe-
coming the purposes for which they were given. A total
disregard to their respective rules and discipline drew on
the monks and canons a heavy load of popular odium. Some
good men there were who endeavoured to oppose the general
delinquency; but their efforts were too feeble to stem the
torrent of monastic luxury. As far back as the year 1381
Wickliffo's principles and doctrines had made some pro-
gress, were well received by men who wished for a reforma-
tion, and were defended and maintained by them as long as
they dared ; till the bishops and clergy began to be so
greatly alarmed, that they procured an act to be passed by
which the secular arm was empowered to support the
corrupt doctrines of the church ; but the first lollard was
not burnt till the year 1401.
The wits also of those times did not spare the gross
morals of the clergy, but boldly ridiculed their ignorance
and profligacy. The most remarkable of these were
Chaucer, and his contemporary, Robert Langelande, better
known by the name of Piers Plowman. The laughable
tales of the former are familiar to almost every reader ;
while the visions of the latter are but in few hands. With
a quotation from the Passus Decimus of this writer I shall
conclude my letter ; not only on account of the remarkable
prediction therein contained, which carries with it somewhat
of the air of a prophecy ; but also as it seems to have been
a striking picture of monastic insolence and dissipation:
and a specimen of one of the keenest pieces of satire now
perhaps subsisting in any language, ancient or modern.
" Now is religion a rider, a romer by streate ;
A leader of leve-days, and a loud begger ;
A pricker on a palfry from maner to maner,
A heape of hounds at his arse, as he a lord were.
And but if his knave kneel, that shall his cope bring,
He loureth at him, and asketh him who taught him curtesie.
Little had lords to done, to give lands from her heirs,
To religious that have no ruth if it rain on her altars.
In many places ther they persons be, by hemself at ease ;
Of the poor have they no pity, and that is her charitie ;
And they letten hem as lords, her lands lie so broad.
OF SELBORNE. 475
And there slial come a king,1 and confess you religious ;
And beate you, as the bible telleth, for breaking your rule,
And amend monials, and monks, and chanons,
And put hem to her penaunce adpristinum statum ire."
LETTER XVIII.
ILLIAM of Waynflete became Bishop of
Winchester in the year 1447, and seems to
have pursued the generous plan of Wykeham
in endeavouring to reform the priory of Sel-
borne.
When Waynflete came to the see he found prior Stype,
alias Stepe, still living, who had been elected as long ago
as the year 1411.
Among my documents I find a curious paper of the
things put into the custody of Peter Bernes the sacrist, and
especially some relics : the title of this evidence is " No.
50. Indentura prioris de Selborne quorundam tradit.
Petro Bernes sacristae, ibidem, ann. Hen. VI. . . . una cum
confiss. ejusdem Petri script."2 The occasion of this cata-
1 F. 1. a. " This prediction, although a probable conclusion concern-
ing a king who after a time would suppress the religious houses, is re-
markable. I imagined it was foisted into the copies in the reign of
king Henry VIII., but it is in MSS. of this poem, older than the year
1400"
"Again, fol. Ixxxv. a. where he, Piers Plowman, alludes to the
Knights Templars, lately suppressed, he says,
" Men of holie kirk
Shall turne as Templars did ; the tyme approacheth nere"
" This, I suppose, was a favourite doctrine in Wickliffe's discourses."
— Warton's Hist, of English Poetry, vol. i. p. 282. — G. W.
2 (Appendix No. 50.)
INDENTURA PRIORIS de SELBORNE quorundam tradit. Petro Barnes sa-
cristce ibidem ann. Hen. 6. ... una cum confiss. ejusdem Petri script.
HEC indentura facta die lune proximo post ffestum natalium Dni anno
regis Hcnrici sexti post conquestum anglie v inter ffratrem
476 ANTIQUITIES
logue, or list of effects, being drawn between the prior and
sacrist does not appear, nor the date when ; only that it
happened in the reign of Hen. VI. This transaction pro-
bably took place when Bernes entered on his office ; and
Jobannem Stepe priorem ecclesie beate Marie de Selborne & Petrum
Bernes sacrist, ibidem videlicet quod predictus prior deliveravit prefato
Petro omnia subscripta. In primis xxn amit xxxi aubes vid. v. sine parura
pro quadragesimaxxii manicui. Item xxn stole Item vm casule vid. ITT
albe pro quadragesima Item xi dalmatic, vid. i debit. Item xvi cape
vid. mi veteres Item unam amittam i albam cum paruris unum mani-
pulum i stolam I casulam et duas dalmaticas de dono Johannis Combe
capellani de Cicestria pro diebus principalibus Item i amittam i aubam
cum paruris i manipulum i stolam i casulam de dono ffratris Thome Haly-
bone canonicis Item i amittam i aubam cum paruris i manipulum i stolam
i casulam pertinentem ad altare sancte Catherine virginis pro priore
Item i amittam n aubas cum paruris n manipul n stolas et n casulas
pertinentes ad altare sancti Petri de dono patris Ricardi holte. Item de
dono ejusdem n tuella vid. i cum fruictello et i canvas pro eodem altare
Item i tuellum pendentem ad terram pro quadragesima Item vi tuell cum
ffruictibus xv tuell sine ffruictell. Item un tuell pro lavatore Item v
corporas Item n ffruictell pro summo altare sine tuellis Itemu coopertor
pro le ceste Item n pallias de serico debili Item I velum pro quadra-
gesima Item I tapetum viridis coloris pro summo altare II ridell cum nil
ridellis parvis pertinent, ad diet, altare Item vil offretor vid. v debit.
Item nil vexilla Item nil pelves in quessones vid. I de serico Item ir
super altaria Item quinq ; calices vid. nil de auro Item n cruettes de
argento de dono dni Johannis Combe capellani de Cicestre Item vm
wuettes de peuter Item I coupam argent, et deaur. Item n osculator
argent. Item I osculatorium cum osse digiti auricular Stl' Johannis
Baptiste Item I crux argent, et deaur. non radicat. Item turribulum
argent et deaur. Item I anulum cum saphiro Item I aliud anulum I
politum aurenm Item I anulum argent, et deauratum Stl' Edmundi.
Item I concha cum pereo infixo Item I cistam argent, et deaur. Item
I imaginem beate Marie argent, et deaurat. Item I parvam crucem cum
v reliquiis Item I junctorium. Sli' Ricardi Item I tecam pro reliquiis
imponend Item I calefactor S"' Ricardi Item nil candelabra vid. n de
stagno et II de ferro Item I pecten S'L Ricardi Item II viell de cristall
In parte fract Item I pelvim de coper ad lavator Item n osculat. de coper
Item I parvum turribulum de latyn Item I vas de coper pro frank et
sence consecrand Item I pixidem de juery pro corpore Christi Item n
vasa de plumbo pro oleo conservando Item I patellam eneam ferro ligat
Item I tripodem ferr. Item I costrell contum II lagen et I potrell. Item
n babyngyres Item n botelles de corio vid. I de quarte et I de pynte
Item in anul. arg. et I pixidem Ste Marie de Wadclon Item ( )
OP SELBOENE. 477
there is the more reason to suppose that to be the case,
because the list consists of vestments and implements, and
relics, such as belonged to the church of the Priory, and fell
under the care of the sacrist. I shall just mention the
relics, although they are not all specified ; and the state of
the live stock of the monastery at that juncture.
(f Item 2 oscillator, argent.
" Item I osculatorium cum osse digiti auricular. — S11.
Johannis Baptistae.1
t( Item 1 parvam crucem cum V. reliqidis.
" Item 1 anulum argent, et deauratum St. Edtnundi.2
" Item 2 osculat. de coper.
" Item 1 junctorium St. Ricardi.3
" Item 1 pecten St. Ricardi."4
The staurum, or live stock, is quite ridiculous, consisting
only of " 2 vacce, 1 sus, 4 hoggett. et 4 porcell." viz. two
cows, one sow, four porkers, and four pigs.
Instrumenta pro Sandyng Item I ledbynff Item I shasshobe Item I
securim Item n scabell. de ferro pro cancell Item I plane Item I cistain
sine cerura Item xnii sonas Item xix taperes ponder xni ft et dimid.
Item II torches ponder xx ft Item xn ft cere et dimid. Item de candelis
de cera ponder vi ft Item I ft de frankincense Item I lagenam olei
Item IX pondera de plumbo
(Vide de stauro in tergo) et in tergo scribnntnr haec,
" n vacce i sus mi hoggett et im porcell." — G. W.
1 How the convent came by the bone of the little finger of St. John
the Baptist does not appear ; probably the founder, while in Palestine,
purchased it among the Asiatics, who were at that time great traders in
relics. We know from the best authority that as soon as Herod had
cruelly beheaded that holy man, " his disciples came and took up the
bt>(\v and buried it, and went and told Jesus." — Matt. xiv. 12. — Farther
would be difficult to say. — G. W.
2 November 20, in the calendar, Edmund king and martyr, in the ninth
century. — See also a Sanctus Edmundus in Godwin, among the arch-
bishops of Canterbury, in the thirteenth century ; his surname Rich, in
1234. -G. W.
3 April 3, ibid. Richard, Bishop of Chichester, in the thirteenth
century ; his surname De la Wich, in 1245.
Junctorium, perhaps a joint or limb of St. Richard ; but what parti-
cular joint the religious were not such osteologists as to specify. This
barbarous word was not to be found in any dictionary consulted by the
author. — G. W.
4 " Pecten inter ministeria sacra recensetur, quo scil. sacerdotes ao
478 ANTIQUITIES
LETTER XIX.
TEPE died towards the end of the year 1453,
as we may suppose pretty far advanced in
life, having been prior forty-four years.
On the very day that the vacancy hap-
pened, viz. January 26, 1453-4, the sub-prior
and convent petitioned the visitor — " vos unicum levamen
nostrum et spem unanirniter rogamus, quatinus eligendum
ex nobis unum confratrem de gremio nostro, in nostra
religione probatum et expertum, licenciam vestram pater-
nalem cum plena libertate nobis concedere dignemini gra-
ciose." — Reg. Waynflete, torn. i.
Instead of the license requested we find next a commission
"custodie prioratus de Selebourne durante vacatione,"
addressed to brother Peter Berne, canon-regular of the
Priory of Selebourne, and of the order of St. Augustine,
appointing him keeper of the said Priory, and empowering
him to collect and receive the profits and revenues, and
"alia bona" of the said Priory; and to exercise in every
respect the full power and authority of a prior ; but to be
responsible to the visitor finally, and to maintain this supe-
riority during the bishop's pleasure only. This instrument
is dated from the bishop's manor-house in Southwark,
March 1, 1453-4, and the seventh of his consecration.
After this transaction it does not appear that the chapter
of the Priory proceeded to any election : on the contrary,
we find that at six months' end from the vacancy the visitor
declared that a lapse had taken place; and that therefore
clerici, antequam in ecclesiam procederent, crines pecterent. E quibus
colligitur monachos, tune temporis, non omnino tonsos fuissi." — Du
Fresne.
The author remembers to have seen in great farm houses a family
comb chained to a post for the use of the hinds when they came in to
their meals. — G. W.
OF SELBOENE. 479
he did confer the priorship on canon Peter Berne. — " Pri-
oratum vacantem et ad nostram collationem seu provisionem,
jure ad nos in hac parte per lapsum temporis legitime
devoluto spectantem, tibi (sc. P. Berne) de legitimo matri-
monio procreato, &c. — conferimus," &c. This deed bears
date, July 28, 1454.— Reg. Waynflete, torn. i. p. 69.
On February 8, 1462, the visitor issued out a power of
sequestration against the Priory of Selborne on account of
notorious dilapidations which threatened manifest ruin to
the roofs, walls, and edifices of the said convent ; and ap-
pointing John Hammond, B.D., rector of the parish church
of Hetleigh, John Hylling, vicar of the parish church of
Newton Valence, and Walter Gorfin, inhabitant of the
parish of Selborne, his sequestrators, to exact, collect, levy,
and receive, all the profits and revenues of the said con-
vent : he adds " ac ea sub arcto et tuto custodiatis, custo-
dirive faciatis ; " as they would answer it to the bishop at
their peril.
In consequence of these proceedings prior Berne, on the
last day of February, and the next year, produced a state of
the revenues of the Priory, No. 381, called "A paper con-
teyning the value of the manors and lands pertayning to
the Priorie of Selborne. 4 Edward III. with a note of
charges yssuing out of it." 1
This is a curious document. From circumstances in this
1 (Appendix, No. 381.)
A Paper contemning the value of the Manors and Lands pertayning to the
Priorie of Selborne. iv. Edw. 3. With a note of charges
yssuing out of it.
SELEBORNE PRIORATUS.
SUMMA totalis valoris maneriorum terrarum tenementorum et premis-
sorum ejusdem Prioratus in ffesto Sli. Michaelis Archang. anno secundo
Regis Edvardi 4d. ut patet Rotul. de valoribus liberat.
XX
mi vi li. (i. e. LXXXVI 11.) x s. vi d.
Tnde in redditibus resolutis domino pape domino Archiepiscopo et in
diversis ifeodis certis personis concessis ac aliis annualibus reprisis in
eisdem Rotul. de valoribus annotatis per annum xini li. six s. v d.
Et remanet de claro valore LXXI li x s. vm d.
4-80
ANTIQUITIES
paper it is plain that the sequestration produced good
effects ; for in it are to be found bills of repairs to a con-
siderable amount.
' Quatuor canonicis et quatuor ffainulis deo et ecclesie ibid, ser-
vientibus pro eorum vadiis vestur. et. diet, ut patet per bill inde
fact, per annum xxx li.
Diversis creditoribus pro eorum debitis persolvendis ut patet
per parcell inde fact. xv. li. xv s. mi d.
Reparacionibus Ecclesiarum domorum murorum et clausu-
rarum ejusdem Prioratus per annum xv li. xv s. mi d.
Annua pencione Domini Prioris et assignata per annum
quousque remanet x li.
SELEBORNE PRIOKATUS.
Modo sequitur de Reformations premissornm.
Summa total, valorum. ibid, misis et ^
desperatis inde deductis prout patet per
declaracionem Dni. Petri Prioris de Sele-
borne ad man. Dni nostri Wynton apud
Palaciuin suum de Wolsley presentat.
per ipsum ultimo die ffebr. Ann. Domini
MCCCCLXII. et penes ipsum remanet.
Pro quatuor canonicis et quatuor ffa- >
mulis deo et ecclesie ibid, servientibus
pro eorum Diet, vadiis et vestur. ut patet
per bill inde fact.
LXXI li. x s. viii d.
unde per ipsum Dnum
nostrum Wynton as-
signantur in fforma
sequente videlicet.
xxx. li.
Pro annua pencione Prioris quousque j ,.
remanet. 3
Pro diversis creditoribus pro eorum
debitis persolvendis ut patet per bill ind
feet.
Pro diversis reparacionibus ecclesi-
arum dcmorum murorum et clausurarum /
ut patet per bill.
xv li. xv. s. mi d.
per ii annos ad xxxi
li. x s. vm d. ultra
LV li. xmi d. de ven-
,dit. stauri.
xv. li. xv. s. mi d.
per ii annos ad xxxi
li. x s. vm. d. Sum*
ma total, valoris pro
debitis et reparacioni-
bus assignat. cum LV
li. xmi d. de vendit.
Stauri ut supra ex vm
li. ii s. vi d.
OF 8ELBOENE. 481
By this evidence also it appears that there were at that
juncture only four canons at the Priory ; l and that these,
and their four household servants, during this sequestration,
for their clothing, wages, and diet, were allowed per ann.
xxx lib.; and that the annual pension of the lord prior,
reside where he would, was to be x lib.
In the year 1468, prior Berne, probably wearied out by
the dissensions and want of order that prevailed in the con-
vent, resigned his priorship into the hands of the bishop.
KEG. WAYNFLETE, torn. i. pars 1"™, fol. 157.
March 28, A.D. 1468.
" In quadam alta camera juxta magnam portam ma-
nerii" of the Bishop of Wynton " de Waltham coram eodem
Debita que debentur ibid, per diversos tenentes et ffirmarios ad festum
Sli. Michaelis anuo tertio Regis Edvardi 4li. videlicet.
Abbas de Derford deffeodffirme suaad ix li YI s. | xx ^ yn g< XI ^
vm d. per annum a retro )
Thomas Perky ns armig.ffirmarmsRectorie de Est-"|
worlam pro uno anno finiente ad ffestum Su. Mich. > LX s.
anno II. Regis Edvardi 4li. J
Johannes Shalmere ball, de Selborne debet LXXV s.
Ricardus Cawry debet de eodem anno vi s.
Surnma xxvn li. viu s. xid.
Thomas Perkyns armig. debet de ffirme sua pre-"|
dicta ad festum S11. Mich ann. vu ultra feod. suum > vu li. vi s. viud.
ad xx s. per annum J
Thomas lussher debet pro ffirme sua ad XL s. per j c g
vinnum cum feod. suis ad xx s. per annum 3
Hugo Pakenham debet de reddit. suo ad xx s. per )
ann. 3
Abbas de Derford debet de ffeod ffirme sua ultra 1
xx li. vu s. xi d. ut supra pro annis in. mi. et v. / xxvm li.
Regis Edvardi J
Walterus Berlond ffirmarius de SJiene debet ix li. v s. n d.
Henr. Shafter ffirmarius ffeod de Basynstoke xn li. mi d.
Henr.lode nuper ffirmarius manerii de Chede debet xx li.
Summa LXVI li. xn s. vi d.
Total LXXXXIV li. xn d.
1 If Bishop Wykeham was so disturbed (see Notab. Visitatio) to find
the number of canons reduced from fourteen to eleven, what would he
have said to have seen it diminished below one third of that number ?
— G. W.
I I
482 ANTIQUITIES
rev. patre ibidem tune sedente," Peter Berne, prior of Sel-
borne, te ipsum prioratum in sacras et venerabiles manus,"
of the bishop, " viva voce libere resignavit:" and his resig-
nation was admitted before two witnesses and a notary
public. In consequence, March 29th, before the bishop,
in " capella manerii sui ante dicti pro tribunali sedente,
comparuerunt fratres" Peter Berne, Thomas London, Wil-
liam Wyndesor, and William Paynell, alias Stretford, canons
regular of the Priory, " capitulum, et conventum ejusdem
ecclesie facientes ; ac jus et voces in electione futura prioris
dicti prioratus solum et in solidum, ut asseruerunt, habentes/'
and after the bishop had notified to them the vacancy of a
prior, with his free license to elect, deliberated awhile, and
then, by way of compromise, as they affirmed, unanimously
transferred their right of election to the bishop before wit-
nesses. In consequence of this the bishop, after full de-
liberation, proceeded, April 7th, " in capella manerii sui de
Waltham," to the election of a prior; " et fratrem Johannem
Morton, priorem ecclesie conventualis de Reygate dicti
ordinis S*1. Augustini Wynton. dioc. in priorem vice et
nomine omnium et singulorum canonicorum predictorum
elegit, in ordine sacerdotali, et etate licita constitutum, &c."
And on the same day, in the same place, before the same
witnesses, John Morton resigned to the bishop the priorship
of Reygate viva voce. The bishop then required his consent
to his own election ; " qui licet in parte renitens tanti reve-
rendi patris se confirmans," obeyed, and signified his con-
sent oraculo vive vocis. Then was there a mandate citing
any one who would gainsay the said election to appear be-
fore the bishop or his commissary in his chapel at Farnham
on the 2nd day of May next. The dean of the deanery of
Aulton then appeared before the chancellor, his commissary,
and returned the citation or mandate dated April 22nd, 1468,
with signification, in writing, of his having published it as
required, dated Newton Valence, May 1st, 1468. This cer-
tificate being read, the four canons of Selborne appeared
and required the election to be confirmed ; et ex super abun-
danti appointed William Long their proctor to solicit in their
name that he might be canonically confirmed. John Morton
OF SELBOENE. 483
also appeared, and proclamation was made ; and no one ap'
pearing against him, the commissary pronounced all ab-
sentees contumacious, and precluded them from objecting
at any other time ; and, at the instance of John Morton
and the proctor, confirmed the election by his decree, and
directed his mandate to the rector of Hedley and the vicar
of Newton Valence to install him in the usual form.
Thus, for the first time, was a person, a stranger to the
convent of Selborne, and never canon of that monastery,
elected prior : though the style of the petitions in former
elections used to run thus, — " Vos .... rogamus quatinus
eligendum ex nobis unum confratrem de gremio nostro, — •
licentiam vestram — nobis concedere dignernini."
LETTER XX.
EIOE MORTON dying in 1471, two canons,
by themselves, proceeded to election, and
chose a prior; but two more (one of them
Berne) complaining of not being summoned,
objected to the proceedings as informal ; till
at last the matter was compromised that the bishop should
again, for that turn, nominate as he had before. But the
circumstances of this election will be best explained by the
following extract :
KEG. WAYNFLETE, torn. ii. pars lma, fol. 7.
Memorandum. A.D. 1471. August 22.
William Wyndesor, a canon-regular of the Priory of
Selborne, having been elected prior on the death of brother
John, appeared in person before the bishop in his chapel
at South Waltham. He was attended on this occasion by
Thomas London and John Bromesgrove, canons, who had
elected him. Peter Berne and William Stratfeld, canons,
also presented themselves at the same time, complaining
that in this business they had been overlooked, and not
484 ANTIQUITIES
summoned ; and that therefore the validity of the election
might with reason be called in question, and quarrels and
dissensions might probably arise between the newly chosen
prior and the parties thus neglected.
After some altercation and dispute they all came to an
agreement with the new prior, that what had been done
should be rejected and annulled; and that they would again,
for this turn, transfer to the bishop their power to elect,
order, and provide them another prior, whom they promised
unanimously to admit.
The bishop accepted of this offer before witnesses ; and
on September 27, in an inner chamber near the chapel
above-mentioned, after full deliberation, chose brother
Thomas Fairwise, vicar of Somborne, a canon-regular of St.
Augustine in the Priory of Bruscough, in the diocese of
Coventry and Litchfield, to be prior of Selborne. The form
is nearly as above in the last election. The canons are
again enumerated; W. Wyndesor, sub-prior, P. Berne, T.
London, W. Stratfeld, J. Bromesgrove, who had formed
the chapter, and had requested and obtained license to elect,
but had unanimously conferred their power on the bishop.
In consequence of this proceeding, the bishop taking the
business upon himself that the Priory might not suffer
detriment for want of a governor, appoints the aforesaid T.
Fairwise to be prior. A citation was ordered as above for
gainsayers to appear October 4th, before the bishop or his
commissaries at South Waltham ; but none appearing, the
commissaries admitted the said Thomas, ordered him to be
installed, and sent the usual letter to the convent to render
him due obedience.
Thus did the Bishop of Winchester a second time appoint
a stranger to be prior of Selborne, instead of one chosen
out of the chapter. For this seeming irregularity the visiter
had no doubt good and sufficient reasons, as probably may
appear hereafter.
0V SELBORNE. 485
LETTER XXI.
HATEVER might have been the abilities and
! disposition of prior Fairwise, it could not
| have been in his power to have brought
about any material reformation in the Priory
of Selborne, because he departed this life in
the month of August, 1472, before he had presided one
twelvemonth.
As soon as their governor was buried, the chapter applied
to their visiter for leave to choose a new prior, which being
granted, after deliberating for a time, they proceeded to an
election by a scrutiny. But as this mode of voting has not
been described but by the mere form given in a note, an
extract from the bishop's register, representing the manner
more fully, may not be disagreeable to several readers.
REG. WAYNFLETE, torn. ii. pars lma, fol. 15.
€< Reverendo, &c. ac nostro patrono graciocissimo vestri
humiles, et devote obedientie filii," &c.
To the right reverend Father in God, and our most
gracious patron, we, your obedient and devoted sons, Wil-
liam Wyndesor, president of the chapter of the Priory of
Selborne, and the convent of that place, do make known to
your lordship, that our priorship being lately vacant by the
death of Thomas Fairwise, our late prior, who died August
llth, 1472, having committed his body to decent sepulture,
and having requested, according to custom, leave to elect
another, and having obtained it under your seal, we "William
Wyndesor, president of the convent, on the 29th of August,
in our chapter-house assembled, and making a chapter, taking
to us in this business Richard ap Jenkyn, and Galfrid Bryan,
chaplains, that our said Priory might not by means of this
vacancy incur harm or loss, unanimously agreed on August the
last for the day of election ; on which day, having first cele-
brated mass, " De sancto spiritu," at the high altar, and having
called a chapter by tolling a bell about ten o' the clock, we,
William Wyndesor, president, Peter Berne, Thomas London,
486 ANTIQUITIES
and William Stratfeld, canons, who alone had voices, being
the only canons, about ten o' the clock, first sung " Veni
Creator," the letters and -license being read in the presence
of many persons there. Then William Wyndesor, in his
own name, and that of all the canons, made solemn procla-
mation, enjoining all who had no right to vote to depart
out of the chapter-house. When all were withdrawn ex-
cept Guyllery de Lacuna, in decretis Baccalarius, and Robert
Peverell, notary-public, and also the two chaplains, the first
was requested to stay, that he might direct and inform us
in the mode of election ; the other, that he might record
and attest the transactions; and the two last that they
might be witnesses to them.
Then, having read the constitution of the general council,
" Quia propter," and the forms of elections contained in it
being sufficiently explained to them by De Lacuna, as well
in Latin as the vulgar tongue, and having deliberated in
what mode to proceed in this election, they resolved on that
of scrutiny. Three of the canons, Wyndesor, Berne, and
London, were made scrutators : Berne, London, and Strat-
fold, choosing Wyndesor ; Wyndesor, London, and Stratfeld,
choosing Berne ; Wyndesor, Berne, and Stratfeld, choosing
London.
They were empowered to take each other's vote, and then
that of Stratfeld: (t et ad inferiorom partem angularem"
of the chapter-house, "juxta ostium ejusdem declinentes,"
with the other persons (except Stratfeld, who stayed behind) ,
proceeded to voting, two swearing, and taking the voice of
the third, in succession, privately. Wyndesor voted first :
" Ego credo Petrum Berne meliorem et utiliorem ad regimen
istius ecclesie, et in ipsum consentio, ac eum riomino," &c.
Berne was next sworn, and in like manner nominated
Wyndesor ; London nominated Berne : Stratfeld was then
called and sworn, and nominated Berne.
" Quibus in scriptis redactis," by the notary-public, they
returned to the upper part of the chapter- house, where by
Wyndesor " sic peracta fecerunt in communi," and then
solemnly, in form written, declared the election of Berne :
when all, " antedicto nostro electo excepto, approbantes et
ratificantes, cepimus decantare solemniter ' Te Deum Lau-
OF SELBORNE. 487
ctamw*,9 et sic canentes dictum electura ad majus altare eccle-
sie deduxiinus, ut apud nos eat moris." Then " Wyndesor
electionem clero et populo infra cliorum dicte ecclesie con-
gregatis publicavit, et personam elect! publico et persona-
liter ostendit." We then returned to the chapter-house,
except our prior; and Wyndesor was appointed by the
other two their proctor, to desire the assent of the elected,
and to notify what had been done to the bishop ; and to
desire him to confirm the election, and do whatever else
was necessary. Then their proctor, before the witnesses,
required Berne's assent in the chapter-house : " qui quidem
instanciis et precibus multiplicatis devictus," consented,
" licet indignus electus," in writing. They therefore re-
quested the bishop's confirmation of their election " sic
canonice et solemniter celebrata," &c. &c. Sealed with
their common seal, and subscribed and attested by the
notary. Dat. in the chapter-house, September 5th, 1472.
In consequence, September llth, 1472, in the bishop's
chapel at Esher, and before the bishop's commissary, ap-
peared W. Wyndesor, and exhibited the above instrument,
and a mandate from the bishop for the appearance of gain-
sayers of the election there on that day: — and no one
appearing, the absentees were declared contumacious ; and
the election confirmed ; and the vicar of Aulton was directed
to induct and install the prior in the usual manner.
Thus did canon Berne, though advanced in years, re-
assume his abdicated priorship for the second time, to the
no small satisfaction, as it may seem, of the Bishop of Win-
chester, who professed, as will be shown not long hence, a
high opinion of his abilities and integrity.
LETTER XXII.
S prior Berne, when chosen in 1454, held his
priorship only to 1468, and then made a
voluntary resignation, wearied and disgusted,
as we may conclude, by the disorder that
prevailed in his convent; it is no matter of
wonder that, when re-chosen in 1472, he should not long
488 ANTIQUITIES
maintain Ms station ; as old age was then coming fast upon
him, and the increasing anarchy and misrule of that declining
institution required unusual vigour and resolution to stem
that torrent of profligacy which was hurrying it on to its
dissolution. We find, accordingly, that in 1478 he re-
signed his dignity again into the hands of the bishop.
REG. WAYNFLETE. FOL. 55.
May 14, 1478. Peter Berne resigned the priorship.
May 16, the bishop admitted his resignation "in manerio
suo de Waltham," and declared the priorship void ; " et
priorat. solacio destituturn esse;" and granted his letters
for proceeding to a new election : when all the religious,
assembled in the chapter-house, did transfer their power
under their seal to the bishop by the following public in-
strument.
" In Dei nomine Amen," &c. A.D. 1478, Maii 19. In
the chapter-house for the election of a prior for that day,
on the free resignation of Peter Berne, having celebrated
in the first place mass at the high altar " De spirit u sancto,"
and having called a chapter by tolling a bell, ut moris est ;
in the presence of a notary and witnesses appeared person-
ally Peter Berne, Thomas Ashford, Stephen Clydgrove and
John Ashton, presbyters, and Henry Canwood,1 in chapter
assembled ; and after singing the hymn " Veni Creator
Spiritus," ' ' cum versiculo et oratione ' Deus qui corda ; '
declarataque licentia Fundatoris et patroni futurum priorem
eligendi concessa, et constitutione consilii generalis que
incipit ' Quia propter ' declaratis ; viisque per quas possent
ad hanc electionem procedere," by the decretorum doctorem,
whom the canons had taken to direct them — they all and
every one (< dixerunt et affirmarunt se nolle ad aliquam
viam procedere : " — but, for this turn only, renounced their
1 Here we see that all the canons were changed in six years ; and
that there was quite a new chapter, Berne excepted, between 1472 and
1478 ; for, instead of Wyndesor, London, and Stratfeld, we find Ashford,
Clydgrove, Ashton, and Canwood, all new men, who were soon gone in
their turn off the stage, and are heard of no more. For, in six years
after, there seem to have been no canons at all. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 489
right, and unanimously transferred their power to the
bishop, the ordinary of the place, promising to receive
whom he should provide; and appointed a proctor to
present the instrument to the bishop under their seal ;
and required their notary to draw it up in due form, &c.,
subscribed by the notary.
After the visiter had fully deliberated on the matter, he
proceeded to the choice of a prior, and elected, by the fol-
lowing instrument, John Sharp, alias Glastenbury.
Fol. 56. Provisio Prioris per Eprn.
Willmus, &c. to our beloved brother in CHRIST, John
Sharp, alias Glastenbmy, Ecclesie conventualis de Bruton,
of the order of St. Austin, in the diocese of Bath and Wells,
canon-regular, salutem, &c. " De tue circumspectionis
industria plurimum confidentes, te virum providum et dis-
cretum, literarum scientia, et moribus merito commendan-
dum, &c." — do appoint you prior — under our seal. (f Dat.
in manerio nostro de Suthwaltham, May 20, 1478, et nostre
Consec. 31."
Thus did the bishop, three times out of the four that he
was at liberty to nominate, appoint a prior from a distance,
a stranger to the place, to govern the convent of Selborne,
hoping by this method to have broken the cabal, and to
have interrupted that habit of mismanagement that had
pervaded the society : but he acknowledges, in an evidence
lying before us, that he never did succeed to his wishes with
respect to those late governors, — " quos tamen male se
habuisse, et inutiliter administrare, et administrasse usque
ad presentia tempora post debitam investigationem, &c.
invenit." The only time that he appointed from among
the canons, he made choice of Peter Berne, for whom he
had conceived the greatest esteem and regard.
When prior Berne first relinquished his priorship, he
returned again to his former condition of canon, in which
he continued for some years ; but when he was re-chosen,
and had abdicated a second time, we find him in a forlorn
state, and in danger of being reduced to beggary, had nob
the Bishop of Winchester interposed in his favour, and with
great humanity insisted on a provision for him for life
490 ANTIQUITIES
The reason for this difference seems to have been, that, in
the first case, though in years, he might have been hale and
capable of taking his share in the duty of the convent; in
the second, he was broken with age, and no longer equal to
the functions of a canon.
Impressed with this idea the bishop very benevolently
interceded in his favour, and laid his injunctions on the new
elected prior in the following manner.
Fol. 56. " In Dei nomine Amen. Nos Willmus, &c.
i<jonsiderantes Petrum Berne," late prior " in administratione
spiritualium et temporalium prioratus laudabiliter vixisse et
rexisse; ipsumque senio et corporis debilitate confractum;
ne in opprobrium religionis mendicari cogatur ; — eidem
annuam pensionem a Domino Johanne Sharp, alias Glaston-
bury, priore moderno," and his successors, and, from the
Priory or church, to be paid every year during his life, " de
voluntate et ex consensu expressis " of the said John Sharp,
" sub ea que sequitur forma verborum — assignamus : "
1st. That the said prior and his successors, for the time
being, honeste exliibebunt of the fruits and profits of the
priorship, " eidem esculenta et potulenta," while he re-
mained in the Priory, " sub consimili portione eorundem
prout convenienter priori," for the time being, ministrari
contigerit ; and in like manner uni famulo, whom he should
choose to wait on him, as to the servientibus of the prior.
Item. " Invenient seu exhibebunt eidem unam honestam
cameram " in the Priory, ' ' cum focalibus necessariis seu
opportunis ad eundem."
Item. We will, ordain, &c. to the said P. Berne an
annual pension of ten marks, from the revenue of the Priory,
to be paid by the hands of the prior quarterly.
The bishop decrees farther, that John Sharp, and hi
successors, shall take an oath to observe this injunction, and
that before their installation.
" Lecta et facta sunt hsec in quodam alto oratorio," be-
longing to the bishop at Suthwaltham, May 25, 1478, in the
presence of John Sharp, who gave his assent, and then
took the oath before witnesses, with the other oaths before
the chancellor, who decreed he should be inducted and in-
stalled ; as was done that same day.
OF SELBORNE. 491
How John Sharp, alias Glastonbury, acquitted himself in
his priorship, and in what manner he made a vacancy,
whether by resignation, or death, or whether he was removed
by the visitor, does not appear : we only find that some time
in the year 1484 there was no prior, and that the bishop
nominated canon Ashford to fill the vacancy.
LETTER XXIII.
HIS Thomas Ashford was most undoubtedly
the last prior of Selborne ; and therefore here
will be the proper place to say something con-
cerning a list of the priors, and to endeavour
to improve that already given by others.
At the end of Bishop Tanner's Notitia Monastica, the
folio edition, among Brown Willis's Principals of Religious
Houses, occur the names of eleven of the priors of Selborne,
with dates. But this list is imperfect, and particularly at
the beginning ; for though the Priory was founded in 1232,
yet it commences with Nich. de Cantia, elected in 1262 ; so
that for the first thirty years no prior is mentioned ; yet
there must have been one or more. We were in hopes that
the register of Peter de Eupibus would have rectified this
omission ; but, when it was examined, no information of the
sort was to be found. From the year 1410 the list is much
corrected and improved ; and the reader may depend on its
being thenceforward very exact.
A List of the Priors of Selborne Priory, from Brown
Willis's Principals of Religious Houses, with additions
within [ ] by the Author.
[John was prior, sine dat.l~\
Nich. de Cantia. el. 1262.
1 See, in Letter XI. of these Antiquities, the reason why prior John
, who had transactions with the Knights Templars, is placed in the
list before the year 1262. — G. W.
492 ANTIQUITIES
[Peter was prior in 1271.]
[Richard was prior in 1280.]
Will. Basing was prior in 1299.
Walter de Insula el. in 1324.
[Some difficulties, and a devolution; but the
election confirmed by Bishop Stratford.]
John de Winton ..." 1339.
Thomas Weston 1377.
John Winchester [Wynchestre] 1410.
[Elected by Bishop Beaufort "per viam vel
formam simplicis compromissi."]
[John Stype, alias Stepe, in 1411.]
Peter Bene [alias Berne or Bernes, appointed
keeper, and, by lapse to Bishop Wayneflete,
prior] in 1454.
[He resigns in 1468.]
John Morton [Prior of Eeygate] in .... 1468.
[The canons by compromise transfer the power of
election to the bishop.]
Will. Winsor [Wyndesor, prior for a few days] 1471.
[but removed on account of an irregular elec-
tion.]
Thomas Farwill [Fairwise, vicar of Somborne] 1471.
[by compromise again elected by the bishop.]
[Peter Berne, re-elected by scrutiny in . . . . 1472.]
[resigns again in 1478.]
John Sharper [Sharp] alias Glastonbury . . . 1478.
[Canon-reg. of Bruton, elected by the bishop by
compromise.]
[Thomas Ashford, canon of Selborne, last prior
elected by the Bishop of Winchester, some time
in the year 1484.
and deposed at the dissolution.]
OF SELBOBNE.
493
LETTER XXIV.
ISHOP WAYNFLETE'S efforts to continue
the Priory still proved unsuccessful ; and the
convent, without any canons, and for some
time without a prior, was tending swiftly to
its dissolution.
When Sharp's, alias Glastonbury's, priorship ended does
not appear. The bishop says that he had been obliged to
remove some priors for maladministration; but it is not
well explained how that could be the case with any, unless
with Sharp ; because all the others, chosen during his epis-
copate, died in their office, viz. Morton and Fairwise ; Berne
only excepted, who relinquished twice voluntarily, and was
moreover approved of by Waynflete as a person of integrity.
But the way to show what ineffectual pains the bishop took,
and what difficulties he met with, will be to quote the
words of the libel of his proctor Radulphus Langley, who
appeared for the bishop in the process of the impropriation
of the Priory of Selborne. The extract is taken from an
attested copy.
" Item — that the said bishop — dicto prioratui et personis
ejusdem pie compatiens, sollicitudines pastorales, labores, et
diligentias gravissimas quam plurimas, tarn per se quam per
suos, pro reformatione premissorum impendebat; et ali-
quando illius loci prioribus, propter malam et inutilem admi-
nistrationem, et dispensationem bonorum predicti prioratus,
suis demeritis exigentibus, amotis ; alios priores in quorum
circumspectione et diligentia confidebat, prefecit ; quos
tamen male se habuisse ac inutiliter adrninistrare, et admi-
nistrasse, usque ad presentia tempora post debitam inves-
tigationem, &c. invenit." So that he despaired, with all his
care, — " statum ejusdem reparare vel restaurare; et con-
siderata temporis malicia, et preteritis timendo, et conjectu-
rando futura de aliqua bona et sancta religione ejusdem
494 ANTIQUITIES
ordinis, &c. juxta piam intentionem primevi fundatoris ibi-
dem habend, desperatur."
William Wainfleet, Bishop of Winchester, founded his
college of St. Mary Magdalen, in the university of Oxford,
in or about the year 1459 ; but the revenues proving insuffi-
cient for so large and noble an establishment, the college
supplicated the founder to augment its income by putting
it in possession of the estates belonging to the Priory of
Selborne, now become a deserted convent, without canons
or prior. The president and fellows state the circumstances
of their numerous institution and scanty provision, and the
ruinous and perverted condition of the Priory. The bishop
appoints commissaries to inquire into the state of the said
monastery ; and, if found expedient, to confirm the appro-
priation of it to the college, which soon after appoints attor-
neys to take possession, September 24, 1484. But the
way to give the reader a thorough insight respecting this
transaction will be to transcribe a farther proportion of the
process of the impropriation from the beginning, which will
lay open the manner of proceeding, and show the consent
of the parties.
IMPROPRTATIO SELBORNE, 1485.
" Universis sancte matris ecclesie filiis, &c. Ricardus
Dei gratia prior ecclesie conventualis de Novo Loco, &C.1
ad universitatem vestre notitie deducimus, &c. quod coram
nobis commissario predicto in ecclesia parochiali Sta. Georgii
de Essher, diet. Winton. dioc. 3°. die Augusti, A.D. 1485,
indictione tertia pontificat. Innocentii 8vi. ann. ]mo. judi-
cialiter comparuit venerabilis vir Jacobus Preston, S. T. P.
1 Ecclesia Conventualis de Novo Loco was the monastery afterwards
called the New Minster, or Abbey of Hyde, in the city of Winchester.
Should any intelligent reader wonder to see that the prior of Hyde
Abbey was commissary to the Bishop of Winton, and should conclude
that there was a mistake in titles, and that the abbot must have been
here meant ; he will be pleased to recollect that this person was the
second in rank ; for, " next under the abbot, in every abbey, was the
prior." — Pref. to Notit. Monast., p. xxix. Besides, abbots were great
personages, and too high in station to submit to any office under the
bishop.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 495
infrascriptus, et exliibuit literas commissionis — quas quidem
per magistrum Thomam Somercotes notarium publicum, &c.
legi fecimus, tenorem sequentem in se continentes." The
same as No. 103, but dated — " In manerio nostro de Essher,
August! lmo. A.D. 1485, et nostre consec. anno 39." [No. 103
is repeated in a book containing the like process in the
preceding year by the same commissary, in the parish
church of St. Andrew the apostle, at Farnham, Sept. 6th,
anno 1484.] " Post quarum literarum lecturam — dictus
magister Jacobus Preston, quasdam procuratorias literas
mag. Bichardi Mayewe presidentis, ut asseruit, collegii
beate Marie Magdalene, &c. sigillo rotundo communi, &c.
in cera rubea impresso sigillatas realiter exhibuit, &c. et
pro eisdem dnis suis, &c. fecit se partem, ac nobis suppli-
cavit ut juxta formam in eisdem traditam procedere digna-
remur, &c" After these proclamations no contradictor or
objector appearing — " ad instantem petitionem ipsius mag.
Jac. Preston, procuratoris, &c. procedendum fore decrevi-
mus vocatis jure vocandis; nee non mag. Tho. Somercotes,
&c. in actorum nostrorum scribam nominavimus. Conse-
quenter et ibidem tune comparuit magister Michael Clyff,
&c. et exhibuit in ea parte procuratorium suum," for the
prior and convent of the cathedral of Winton, " et fecit se
partem pro eisdem. — Deinde comparuit coram nobis, &c.
honestus vir Willmus Cowper," proctor for the bishop as
patron of the Priory of Selborne, and exhibited his " pro-
curatorium, &c." After these were read in the presence
of Clyff' and Cowper, " Preston, viva voce," petitioned the
commissary to annex and appropriate the Priory of Selborne
to the college — " propter quod fructus, redditus, et pro-
ventus ejusdem coll. adeo tenues sunt et exiles, quod ad
sustentationem ejus, &c. non sufnciunt." — The commissary,
" ad libellandum et articulandum in scrip tis" — adjourned
the court to the 5th of August, then to be held again in the
parish church of Essher.
W. Cowper being then absent, Radulphus Langley ap-
peared for the bishop, and was admitted his proctor. Preston
produced his libel or article ' ' in scriptis " for the union, &c.
f< et admitti petiit eundem cum effectu ; cujus libelli tenor
496 ANTIQUITIES
sequitur. — In Dei nomine, Amen. Coram nobis venerabih
in Christo patre Bichardo, priore, &c. de Novo Loco, &c.
commissario, &c." On the part of the college of Magd.
dicit, allegat, and in his " scriptis proponit, &c."
' ' Imprimis — that said college consists of a president and
eighty scholars, besides sixteen choristers,thirteen servientes
inibi altissimo famulantibus, et in scientiis plerisque libera-
libus, presertim in sacra theologia studentibus, nedum ad
ipsorum presidentis et scholarium pro presenti et imposte-
rum, annuente deo, incorporandorum in eodem relevamen ;
verum etiam ad omnium et singulorum tarn scholarium quam
religiosorum cujuscunque ordinis undequaque illuc confluere
pro salubri doctrina volentium utilitatem multiplicem, ad
incrementa virtutis fideique catholice stabilimentum. Ita
videlicet quod omnes et singuli absque personarum seu
nationum delectu illuc accedere volentes, lecturas publicas
et doctrinas tarn in grammatica, loco ad collegium contiguo,
ac philosophiis morali et naturali, quam in sacra theologia
in eodem collegio perpetuis temporibus continuandas libere
atque gratis audire valeant et possint, ad laudern gloriam et
honorem Dei, &c. extitit fundatum et stabilituin."
For the first item in this process see the beginning of
this letter. Then follows item the second — "that the
revenues of the college non sufficiunt his diebus." "Item
— that the premisses are true, &c. ut super eisdem labora-
runt, et laborant publica vox et fama. Unde facta fide
petit pars eorundem that the Priory be annexed to the
college : ita quod dicto prioratu vacante liccat iis ex tune
to take possession, &c" This libel, with the express con-
sent of the other proctors, we, the commissary, admitted,
and appointed the 6th of August for Preston to prove the
premisses.
Preston produced witnesses, W. Gyfford, S. T. P., John
Nele, A. M., John Chapman, chaplain, and Robert Baron,
literatus, who were admitted and sworn, when the court was
prorogued to the 6th of August ; and the witnesses, on the
same 6th of August, were examined by the commissary,
"in capella infra manerium de Essher situata, secrete et
eingillatim:" Then follow the " liters procuratorise : " first
OF SELBOUNE. 497
that of the college, appointing Preston and Langport their
proctors, dated August 30th, 1484 ; then that of the prior
and convent of the cathedral of Winton, appointing David
Husband and Michael Cleve, dated September 4th, 1484 ;
then that of the bishop, appointing W. Gyfford, Radulphus
Langley, and Will. Cowper, dated September 3rd, 1484.
Consec. 38°. — Quo die adveniente, in dicta eccleaia paro-
chiali, appeared " coram nobis" James Preston to prove
the contents of his libel, and exhibited some letters testi-
monial with the seal of the bishop, and these were admitted ;
and consequenter Preston produced two witnesses, viz.
Dominum Thomam Ashforde nuper priorem dicti prioratus,
et Willm. Rabbys literatum, who were admitted and sworn,
and examined as the others, by the commissary ; f ' tune &
ibidem assistente scriba secrete & singillatim ; " and their
depositions were read and made public, as follows :
Mr. W. Gyfford, S. T. P., aged 57, of the state of Magd.
Coll. &c. &c. as before :
Mr. John Nele, aged 57, proves the articles also :
Robert Baron, aged 56 :
Johannes Chapman, aged 35, also affirmed all the five
articles :
Dompnus Thomas Ashforde, aged 72 years — " dicit
2dum gum 4um articuios in eodem libello contentos, concer-
nentes statum dicti prioratus de Selebourne, fuisse et esse
veros."
W. Rabbys, aetat 40 ann. agrees with Gyfford, &c.
Then follows the letter from the bishop, " in subsidium
probationis," abovementioned — " Willmus, &c. salutem, &c.
noverint universitas vestra, quod licet nos prioratui de Sele-
bourne, &c. pie compacientes sollicitudines* pastorales, la-
bores, diligentias quamplurimas per nos & commissaries
nostros pro reformatione status ejus impenderimus, justicia
id poscente ; nihilominus tamen," &c. as in the article — to
" desperatur," dated " in manerio nostro de Essher, Aug.
3d, 1485, & consec. 39." Then, on the 6th of August,
Preston, in the presence of the other proctors, required that
they should be compelled to answer ; when they all allowed
K K
498 ANTIQUITIES
the articles " fuisse & ease vera;" and the commissary, at
the request of Preston, concluded the business, and appointed
Monday, August 8th, for giving his decree in the same
church of Essher; and it was that day read, and contains
a recapitulation, with the sentence of union, &c., witnessed
and attested.
As soon as the president and fellows of Magdalen Col-
lege had obtained the decision of the commissary in their
favour, they proceeded to supplicate the pope, and to entreat
his holiness that he would give his sanction to the sentence
of union. Some difficulties were started at Rome ; but
they were surmounted by the college agent, as appears by
his letters from that city. At length Pope Innocent VIII.
by a bull1 bearing date the 8th day of June, in the year of
our Lord 1486, and in the second year of his pontificate,
confirmed what had been done, and suppressed the convent.
Thu& fell the considerable and well-endowed Priory of
Selborne, after it had subsisted about two hundred and
fifty- four years ; about seventy- four years after the suppres-
sion of Priories alien by Henry V., and about fifty years
before the general dissolution of monasteries by Henry VIII.
The founder, it is probable, had fondly imagined that the
sacredness of the institution, and the pious motives on
which it was established, might have preserved it inviolate
to the end of time — yet it fell,
" To teach us that God attributes to place
No sanctity, if none be thither brought
By men, who there frequent, or therein dwell."
MILTON'S " Paradise Lost."
1 There is nothing remarkable in this bull of Pope Innocent except
the statement of the annual revenue of the Priory of Selborne, which is
therein estimated at ISQflor. auri; whereas Bishop Godwin sets it at
£337 15s. Q^d. Now a floren, so named, says Camden, because made
by Florentines, was a gold coin of King Edward III. in value 6s.,
whereof 160 is not one-seventh part of £337 15s. G±d. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 499
LETTER XXV.
£ AINFLEET did not long enjoy the satisfac-
tion arising from this new acquisition ; but
departed this life in a few months after he
had effected the union of the Priory with his
late founded college ; and was succeeded in
the see of Winchester by Peter Courtney, some time to-
wards the end of the year 1486.
In the beginning of the following year the new bishop
released the president and fellows of Magdalen College from
all actions respecting the Priory of Selborne ; and the prior
and convent of St. Swithun, as the chapter of Winchester
cathedral, confirmed the release.1
IS". 293. "Relaxatio Petri epi Winton Ricardo Mayew
President!, omnium actionum occasione indempnitatis sibi
debite pro unione Prioratus de Selborne dicto collegio.
Jan. 2. 1487. et translat. anno 1°."
N. 374. {f Relaxatio prioris et conventus Sfa. Swithini
Winton confirmans relaxationem Petri ep. Winton/' 1487.
Jan. 13.
Ashforde, the deposed prior, who had appeared as an
evidence for the impropriation of the Priory at the age
of seventy-two years, that he might not be destitute of
a maintenance, was pensioned by the college to the day of
his death; and was living on till 1490, as appears by his
acquittances.
REG. A. ff. 46.
" Omnibus Christi fidelibus ad quos presens scriptum
pervenerit, Richardus Mayew, presidens, &c. et scolares,
salutem in Domino "
" Noveritis nos prefatos presidentem et scolares dedisse,
1 The Bishops of Winchester were patrons of the Priory. — G. W.
500 ANTIQUITIES
concessisse, et hoc present! scripto confirmasse Thome Ash-
forde, capellano, quendam annualem redditum sex librarum
tresdecim solidorum et quatuor denariorum bone et legalis
monete Anglie — ad terminum vite prefati Thome "- — to be
paid from the possessions of the college in Basingstoke. —
tf In cujus rei testimonium sigillum nostrum commune pre-
sentibus apponimias. Dat. Oxon. in coll. nostro supradicto
prime die mensis Junii anno regis Ricardi tertii secundo,"
viz. 1484. The college, in their grant to Ashforde. style
him only capellanus ; but the annuitant very naturally, and
with a becoming dignity, asserts his late title in his acquit-
tances, and identifies himself by the addition otnuperpriorem,
or late prior.
As, according to the persuasion of the times, the de-
priving the founder and benefactors of the Priory of their
masses and services would have been deemed the most
impious of frauds, Bishop Wainfleet, having by statute
ordained four obits for himself to be celebrated in the chapel
of Magdalen College, enjoined in one of them a special
collect for the anniversary of Peter de Rupibus, with a par-
ticular prayer — " Deus Indulgentiarum."
The college also sent Nicholas Langrish, who had been
a chantry priest at Selborne, to celebrate mass for the
souls of all that had been benefactors to the said Priory
and college, and for all the faithful who had departed
this life.
N. 356. Thomas Knowles, presidens, &c. — "damus et
concedimus Nicholao Langrish quandam capellaniam, vel
salarium, sive alio quocunque nomine censeatur, in prioratu
quondam de Selborne pro termino 40 annorum, si tarn diu
vixerit. Ubi dictus magr. Nicholaus celebrabit pro anima-
bus omnium benefactorum dicti prioratus et coll. nostri, et
omnium fidelium defunctorum, &c. Insuper nos, &c. con-
cedimus eidem ibidem celebranti in sustentationem suam
quandam annualem pensionem sive annuitatem octo librarum,
&c. — in dicta capella dicti prioratus — concedimus duas
cameras contiguas ex parte boreali dicte capelle, cum una
coqiiina, et cum uno stabulo conveniente pro tribus equis,
cum pomerio eidem adjacente voc. le Orcheyard — Preterea
OF SELBOENE. 501
26s. 8d. per ann. ad inveniendum unum clericum ad servi-
enduni sibi ad altar e, et aliis negotiis necessariis ejus," —
His wood to be granted him by the president on the pro-
gress.— He was not to absent himself beyond a certain time;
and was to superintend the coppices, wood, and hedges. —
" Dat. 5to. die Julii. an0. Hen. VIIIvi. 36°." [viz. 1546.]
Here we see the Priory in a new light, reduced as it
were to the state of a chantry, without prior and without
canons, and attended only by a priest, who was also a sort
of bailiff or woodman, his assistant clerk, and his female
cook.1 Owen Oglethorpe, president, and Magdalen College,
in the fourth year of Edward VI., viz. 1551, granted an
annuity of ten pounds a year for life to Men. Langrish,
who, from the preamble, appears then to have been fellow
of that society : but, being now superannuated for business,
this pension is granted him for thirty years, if he should live
so long. It is said of him — ' ' cum jam sit provectioris etatis
quam ut," &c.
Laurence Stubb, president of Magd. Coll. leased out the
Priory lands to John Sharp, husbandman, for the term of
twenty years, as early as the seventeenth year of Henry
VIII. — viz. 1256 : and it appears that Henry Newlyn had
been in possession of a lease before, probably towards the
end of the reign of Henry VII. Sharp's rent was vih. per
ann. — Kegist. B. p. 43.
By an abstract from a lease lying before me, it appears
that Sharp found a house, two barns, a stable, and a duf-
house [dove-house], built, and standing on the south side
of the old Priory, and late in the occupation of JSTewlyn.
In this abstract also are to be seen the names of all the
fields, many of which continue the same to this day.2 Of
1 This is a clerical error. The text (see last page) is " cum una
coquina et cum uno stabulo," with a kitchen and stable. — ED.
2 It may not be amiss to mention here that various names of tithings,
farms, fields, woods, &c., which appear in the ancient deeds and evi-
dences of several centuries' standing, are still preserved in common use
with little or no variation : — as Norton, Southington, Durton, Achangre,
Blackmore, Bradshot, ^lood, Plestor, &c., &c. At the same time it
should be acknowledged that other places have entirely lost their original
502 ANTIQUITIES
some of them I shall take notice, where anything singular
occurs.
And here first we meet with Paradyss [Paradise] Mede.
Every convent had its Paradise ; which probably was an
enclosed orchard, pleasantly laid out, and planted with fruit
trees. Tylehouse Grove, so distinguished from having a
tiled house near it.1 Butt- wood Close ; here the servants
of the Priory and the village swains exercised themselves
with their long bows, and shot at a mark against a butt, or
bank.2 Cundyth [conduit] Wood : the engrosser of the
lease not understanding this name has made a strange bar-
barous word of it. Conduit Wood was and is a steep rough
cow-pasture, lying above the Priory, at about a quarter of
a mile to the south-west. In the side of this field there is
a spring of water that never fails ; at the head of which a
cistern was built which communicated with leaden pipes
that conveyed water to the monastery. When this reservoir
was first constructed does not appear ; we only know that it
underwent a repair in the episcopate of Bishop Wainfleet,
about the year 1462. :i Whether these pipes only conveyed
titles, as Le Buri and Trucstede in this " village ; and La Liega, or
La Lyge, which was the name of the original site of the Priory, &c. —
G.W.
1 Men at first heaped sods, or fern, or heath, on their roofs to keep off
the inclemencies of weather ; and then by degrees laid straw or haum.
The first refinements in roofing were shingles, which are very ancient.
Tiles are a very late and imperfect covering, and were not much in use
till the beginning of the sixteenth century. The first tiled house at
Nottingham was in 1503.— G. W.
Mr. Bennett has suggested that perhaps the tile house was the
establishment at which the tiles used in the convent flooring were made.
The number of plain tiles which were used there appears to have been
considerable : in the preparation of the ornamented ones much time
must have been occupied. The manufacture of them on the spot would
have been quite in accordance with the arrangements made by such
establishments generally, and certainly by the Priory of Selborne, for
carrying on trades within themselves, and thus rendering themselves
self-dependent only. — ED.
3 There is also a Butt-close just at the back of the village. — G. W.
2 N. 381. " Clausure terre abbatie ecclesie parochiali de Seleburnc,
ixs. iiiic?. Reparacionibus doniorum predict! prioratus iiii lib. xi s.
Ague conduct, ibidem, xxiiid. — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 503
the water to the Priory for common and culinary purposes,
or contributed to any matters of ornament and elegance, we
shall not pretend to say ; nor when artists and mechanics
first understood anything of hydraulics, and that water
confined in tubes would rise to its original level. There is
a person now living who had been employed formerly in
digging for these pipes, and once discovered several yards,
which they sold for old lead.
There was also a plot of ground called Tan House Garden :
and " Tannaria sua" a tan-yard of their own, has been
mentioned in Letter XVI. This circumstance I just take
notice of, as an instance that monasteries had trades and
occupations carried on within themselves.1
Registr. B. pag. 112. Here we find a lease of the par-
sonage of Selborne to Thomas Sylvester and Miles Arnold,
husbandmen — of the tythes of all manner of corne per-
taining to the parsonage — with the offerings at the chapel
of Whaddon belonging to the said parsonage. Dat. June 1.
27th. Hen. 8th. [viz. 1536.]
As the chapel of Whaddon has never been mentioned till
now, and as it is not noticed by Bishop Tanner in his
Notitia Monastica, some more particular account of it will
be proper in this place. Whaddon was a chapel of ease
to the mother church of Selborne, and was situated in
the tithing of Oakhanger, at about two miles' distance
from the village. The farm and field whereon it stood
are still called Chapel Farm and Field :* but there are
no remains or traces of the building itself, the very foun-
dations having been destroyed before the memory of man.
In a farm yard at Oakhanger we remember a large hollow
stone of a close substance, which had been used as a hog-
trough, but was then broken. This stone, tradition said,
had been the baptismal font of Whaddon chapel. The
chapel had been in a very ruinous state in old days ; but
1 There is still a wood near the Priory, called Tanner's Wood. —
G. W.
2 This is a manor-farm, at present the property of Lord Stawell ;
and belonged probably in ancient times to Jo. de Venur, or Venuz, one
of the first benefactors to the Priory. — G. W.
504 ANTIQUITIES
was new built at the instance of Bishop Wainfleet, about
the year 1463, during the first priorship of Berne, in con-
sequence of a sequestration issued forth by that visitor
against the Priory on account of notorious and shameful
dilapidations.1
The Selborne rivulet becomes of some breadth at Oak-
hanger, and, in very wet seasons, swells to a large flood.
There is a bridge over the stream at this hamlet of con-
siderable antiquity and peculiar shape, known by the name
of Tunbridge : it consists of one single blunt Gothic arch,
so high and sharp as to render the passage not very con-
venient or safe.2 Here was also, we find, a bridge in very
early times ; for Jacobus de Hochangre, the first benefactor
to the Priory of Selborne, held his estate at Hochangre by
the service of providing the king one foot soldier for forty
days, and by building this bridge. " Jacobus de Hoch-
angre tenet Hochangre in com. Southampton, per Ser-
jantiam3 inveniendi unum valectum in exercitu Domini
regis [scil. Henricii IIP1.] per 40 dies; et ad faciendum
pontem de Hochangre : et valet per ann. C. s." — Blount's
" Ancient Tenures," p. 84.
A dove-house was a constant appendant to a manorial
dwelling : of this convenience more will be said hereafter.
A corn-mill was also esteemed a necessary appendage of
every manor ; and therefore was to be expected of course
at the Priory of Selborne.
The prior had secta molendinij or ad molendinum :4 a
power of compelling his vassals to bring their corn to be
1 See Letter XIX. of these Antiquities. — " Summa total, solut. de
novis edifieationibus, et reparacionibus per idem tempus, ut patet per
comput."
" Videlicet de nova edificat. Capelle Marie de Wadden. xiiii lib. v s.
viii d. — Reparacionibus ecclesie Prioratus, canceller, et capellar. eccle-
siarum et capellarum de Selborne, et Estworhlam." — &c. &c.
2 Inconvenient antiquity has, in this instance, given way to modern
convenience. The little bridge is now low and easy of passage, and con-
sists of three small arches instead of one. — ED.
3 Sargentia, a sort of tenure of doing something for the king. — G. W.
4 " Servitium, quo feudatorii grana sua ad Domini molendinum, ibi
molenda perferre, ex consuetudine, astringuntur." — G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 505
ground at his mill according to old custom. He had also,
according to Bishop Tanner, secta molendini de Strete : but
the -purport of Strete, we must confess, we do not under-
stand.1 Strete, in old English, signifies a road or highway,
as Watling Strete, &c., therefore the prior might have some
mill on a high road. The Priory had only one mill origi-
nally at Selborne ; but, by grants of lands, it came possessed
of one at Durton, and one at Oakhanger, and probably some
on its other several manors.2 The mill at the Priory was
in use within the memory of man, and the ruins of the
mill-house were standing within these thirty years: the
pond and dam, and miller's dwelling, still remain.3 As the
stream was apt to fail in very dry summers, the tenants
found their situation very distressing for want of water, and
so were forced to abandon the spot. This inconvenience
was probably never felt in old times, when the whole dis-
trict was nothing but woodlands : and yet several centuries
ago there seem to have been two or three mills between
Well-head and the Priory.
Occasional mention has been made of the many privileges
and immunities enjoyed by the convent and its priors ; but
a more particular statement seems to be necessary. The
author therefore thinks this the proper place, before he
concludes these antiquities, to introduce all that has been
collected by the judicious Bishop Tanner, respecting the
Priory and its advantages, in his JSTotitia Monastica, a book
now seldom seen, on account of the extravagance of its
price; and being but in few hands cannot be easily con-
1 As there was another manor besides that of the Priory, in the Strete
of Selborne, namely Sir Adam Gurdon's, possibly the privilege secta
molendini de Strete enabled the prior to compel the vassals of that manor,
equally with his own, to bring their corn to be ground at his mill. — ED.
2 Thomas Knowles, president, &c. ann. Hen. 8vi. xxiii0. [viz. 1532.]
devised to J. Whitelie their mills, &c. for twenty years. Rent xxiii s.
iiii d. — Accepted Frewen, president, &c. ann. Caroli xv. [viz. 1640.]
demised to Jo. Hook and Elizabeth, his wife, the said mills. Rent as
above.— G. W.
3 The miller's dwelling has long since disappeared ; and the Mill-
field, now cultivated as a hop -ground, commemorates in name only the
former use of the spot. — ED.
506 ANTIQUITIES
suited.1 He also adds a few of its many privileges from
other authorities : — the account is as follows. — Tanner,
page 166.
SELEBURNE.
A Priory of black canons, founded by the often-men-
tioned Peter de Rupibus, Bishop of Winchester, A.D. 1233,
and dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary : but was sup-
pressed— and granted to William Wainfleet, Bishop of
Winchester, who made it part of the endowment of St.
Mary Magdalene College in Oxford. The Bishops of Win-
chester were patrons of it. [Pat. 17. Ed. II.] — Vide in
Mon. Angl. torn. ii. p. 343. " Cartam fundationis ex ipso
autographo in archivis Coll. Magd. Oxon. ubi etiam con-
servata sunt registra, cartae, rentalia et alia munimenta ad
hunc prioratum spectantia.
"Extracta quaedam e registro MS. in Bibl. Bodl. —
Dodsworth, vol. 89. f. 140."
" Cart, antiq. N. N. n. 33. P. P. n. 48. et 71. Q. Q. n.
40. plac. coram justit. itin. [Southampton] 20 Hen. rot. 25.
De eccl. de Basing, & Basingstoke. Plac. de juratis apud
Winton. 40 Hen. III. rot. — Pro secta molendini de Strete.
Cart. 54. Hen. III. m. 3. [De mercatu, ty feria apud
Seleborne, a mistake.]— Pat. 9. Edw. I. m.— Pat. 30. Edw. I.
m.— Pat. 33. Edw. I. p. 1. m.— Pat. 35. Edw. I. m.— Pat. 1.
Edw. II. p. 1. m. 9.— Pat. 5. Edw. II. p. 1. m. 21. De
terris in Achanger. — Pat. 6. Edw. II. p. 1. m. 7. De
eisdem. — Brev. in Scacc. 6 Edw. II. Pasch. rot. 8. — Pat.
17. Edw. II. p. 1. m. — Cart. 10. Edw. III. n. 24. — Quod
terras suae in Seleburn, Achangre, Norton, Basings, Basing-
stoke, and Nately, sint de afforestatas, and pro aliis liber-
tatibus. — Pat. 12. Edw. III. p. 3. m. 3.— Pat. 13. Edw. III.
p. 1. m.— Cart. 18. Edw. III. n. 24."
" N. N. 33. Rex concessit quod prior et canonici de
Seleburn habeant per terras suas de Seleburne, Achangre,
1 A few days after this was written a new edition of this valuable work
was announced in the month of April of the year 1787, as published by
Mr. Nasmith.— G. W.
OF SELBORNE. 507
Norton, Brompden, Basinges, Basingstoke, & Nately,
diversas libertates.
" P. P. 48. Quod prior de Seleburne liabeat terras suas
quietas de vasto et regardo." — Extracts from AyloftVs
" Calendars of Ancient Charters."
" Placita de juratis & assis coram Salom de Roff, & sociis
suis justic. itiner. apud Wynton in comitatu Sutht. — anno
regni R. Edvardi filii reg. Henr. octavo. — Et Por de Sele-
born ht. in Selebr. furc. thurset. pillory, emendasse panis, fy
suis." [cerevisise.] — Chapter House, Westminster.
" Placita Foreste apud Wynton in com. Sutham. — Anno
reg. Edwardi octavo coram Rog. de Clifford. — &c. Justic.
ad eadem placita audienda et tminand. assigtis.
" Carta Pror de Seleburn, H. Dei gra. rex. angl. &c.
Concessim. prior, see. Marie de Seleburn. et canonicis
ibidem Deo servient q ipi et oes hoies sui in
pdcis terris suis et tenementis manentes sint in ppetuni
quieti de sectis Swanemotor. et omnium alior. placitor. for.
et de espeltamentis canum. et de omnibus submonitoibz.
placitis querelis et exaccoibus et occoibz. ad for. et for. et
viridar. et eor. ministros ptinentibz." — Chapter House,
Westminster.
" Plita Forestarum in com. Sutht. apud Suthamton
anno regni regis Edwardi tcii post conquestum quarto
coram Johe Mantvers. &c. justic. itinand &c.
" De hiis qui clamant libtates intra Forestas in com.
Sutht.
" Prior de Selebourne clamat esse quietus erga dnm
regem de omnibus finibus et amerciamentis p tnsgr. et
omnibus exaccoibz ad Doni. regem vel hered. suos ptinent.
pret. plita corone reg.
" Item clamat qd si aliquis hominum suorurn de terris et
ten. p. delicto suo vitam aut membrum debeat amittere, vel
fugiat & judico stare noluerit, vel aliud delictum fecit pro
quo debeat catella sua amittere, ubicunq ; justitia fieri
debeat omnia catella ilia sint ptci Prioris et successor, suor.
508 ANTIQUITIES
Et liceat eidem priori et ballis suis ponere se in seisinam in
hujusmodi catall. incasibus pdcis sine disturbacone ballivor.
dni reg. quorumcunque.
" Item clam, quod licet aliqua libtatum p dnm regem con-
cessar. pcessu temporis quocunq ; casu contingente usi non
fuerint, nlominus postea eadm libtate uti possit. Et pdcms
prior quesitus p justic. quo warranto clamat omn. terr. et
ten. sua in Seleburne, Norton, Basynges, Basyngestoke, &
Nattele, que prior domus pdte huit & tenuit Xmo die April
anno regni dni Hen. reg. pavi dni reg. nue XVIII. immppm
esse quieta de vasto et regardo, et visu forestarior. et viri-
darior. regardator. et omnium ininistrorum foreste." &c. &c.
— Chapter House, Westminster.
LETTER XXVI.
HOUGH the evidences and documents of the
Priory and parish of Selborne are now at an
end, yet, as the author has still several things
to say respecting the present state of that
convent and its Grange, and other matters,
he does not see how he can acquit himself of the subject
without trespassing again on the patience of the reader by
adding one supplementary letter.
No sooner did the Priory (perhaps much out of repair at
the time) become an appendage to the college, but it must
at once have tended to swift decay. Magdalen College
wanted now only two chambers for the chantry priest and
his assistant ; and therefore had no occasion for the hall,
dormitory, and other spacious apartments belonging to so
large a foundation. The roofs, neglected, would soon
become the possession of daws and owls ; and, being rotted
and decayed by the weather, would fall in upon the floors ;
so that all parts must have hastened to speedy dilapidation
and a scene of broken ruins. Three full centuries have
OF SELSORNE. 509
now passed since the dissolution ; a series of years that
would craze the stoutest edifices. But, besides the slow
hand of time, many circumstances have contributed to level
this venerable structure with the ground ; of which nothing
now remains but one piece of a wall of about ten feet long,
and as many feet high, which probably was part of an
out-house.1 As early as the latter end of the reign of
Hen. VII. we find that a farm-house and two barns were
built to the south of the Priory, and undoubtedly out of its
materials. Avarice, again, has much contributed to the
overthrow of this stately pile, as long as the tenants could
make money of its stones or timbers. Wantonness, no
doubt, has had a share in the demolition ; for boys love tc
destroy what men venerate and admire. A remarkable
instance of this propensity the writer can give from his
own knowledge. When a schoolboy, more than fifty years
ago, he was eyewitness, perhaps a party concerned, in the
undermining a portion of that fine old ruin at the north end
of Basingstoke town, well known by the name of Holy Ghost
Chapel. Very providentially the vast fragment, which
these thoughtless little engineers endeavoured to sap, did
not give way so soon as might have been expected ; but it
fell the night following, and with such violence that it shook
the very ground, and, awakening the inhabitants of the
neighbouring cottages, made them start up in their beds as
if they had felt an earthquake. The motive for this dan-
gerous attempt does not so readily appear : perhaps the
more danger the more honour, thought the boys ; and the
notion of doing some mischief gave a zest to the enterprise.
As Dryden says upon another occasion,
" It look'd so like a sin it pleased the more."
Had the Priory been only levelled to the surface of the
ground, the discerning eye of an antiquary might have as-
certained its ichnography, and some judicious hand might
have developed its dimensions. But, besides other ravages,
1 This wall has since shared the fate of other portions of the Priory,
and the stones thereof have gone either to mend a barn or to repair a
road — ED.
510 ANTIQUITIES
the very foundations have been torn up for the repair of
the highways ; so that the site of this convent is now be-
come a rough, rugged pasture-field, full of hillocks and pits,
choked with nettles and dwarf-elder, and trampled by the
feet of the ox and the heifer.1
As the tenant at the Priory was lately digging among
the foundations, for materials to mend the highways, his
labourers discovered two large stones, with which the far-
mer was so pleased that he ordered them to be taken out
whole. One of these proved to be a large Doric capital,
worked in good taste ; and the other a base of a pillar ;
both formed out of the soft freestone of this district.
These ornaments, from their dimensions, seem to have be-
longed to massive columns ; and show that the church of
this convent was a large and costly edifice. They were
found in the space which has always been supposed to have
contained the south transept of the Priory church. Some
fragments of large pilasters were also found at the same
time. The diameter of the capital was two feet three inches
and a half; and of the column, where it had stood on the
bas.e, eighteen inches and three quarters.
1 Mr. Bennett found in 1837 that the ground had been so effectually
cleared as almost to have become a smooth homestead. A few heaps of
stone derived, it was supposed, from the last remnants of the founda-
tions, and piled ready for use as materials, were all that remained in
the Priory field to evidence the former site of that important building.
Among the heaps were some fashioned stones which would not be broken
to pieces. Some fragments of columns and of a pediment, perhaps of
a monument of superior pretensions, were preserved. These were
placed, together with a stone coffin that had been dug up on the spot,
in the garden of the adjoining farm. A considerable number of orna-
mented tiles were also found ; some of which exhibited merely fancy
devices, some bore eagles displayed and other apparently armorial em-
blems, and one bore a shield of three fleurs de luces, supported by two
hawks. These tiles were used to form the pavement of a summer-house
in the garden of the Priory Farm. Some fragments of stained glass
were also found, together with portions of the ornamented leaden case-
ment including them; affording additional proofs of an important
building.
The complete clearance, however, which has since taken place, renders
it improbable that any future discovery of interest will be made on the
spot. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 511
Two years ago some labourers digging again among the
ruins found a sort of rude thick vase or urn of soft stone,
containing about two gallons in measure, on the verge of
the brook, in the very spot which tradition has always
pointed out as having been the site of the convent kitchen.
This clumsy utensil, whether intended for holy water, or
whatever purpose, we were going to procure, but found that
the labourers had just broken it in pieces, and carried it
out on the highways.1
The Priory of Selborne had possessed in this village a
Grange, an usual appendage to manorial estates, where the
fruits of their lands were stowed and laid up for use, at a
time when men took the natural produce of their estates in
kind. The mansion of this spot is still called the Grange,
and is the manor-house of the convent possessions in this
place. The author has conversed with very ancient people
who remembered the old original Grange ; but it has long
given place to a modern farm-house. Magdalen College
holds a court-leet and court-baron2 in the great wheat-barn
of the said Grange, annually, where the president usually
superintends, attended by the bursar and steward of the
college.3
The following uncommon presentment at the court is
not unworthy of notice. There is on the south side of the
king's field (a large common field so called) a consider-
able tumulus, or hillock, now covered with thorns and
bushes, and known by the name of Kite's Hill, which is
presented, year by year, in court as not ploughed. Why
this injunction is still kept up respecting this spot, which
is surrounded on all sides by arable land, may be a question
1 A judicious antiquary, who saw this vase, observed, that it possibly
might have been a standard measure between the monastery and its
tenants. The Priory we have mentioned claimed the assize of bread
and beer in Selborne manor ; and probably the adjustment of dry mea-
sures for grain, &c. — G. Wt
2 The time when this court is held is the mid-week between Easter
and Whitsuntide.— G. W.
3 Owen Oglethorp, president, &c. an. Edw. Sexti primo [viz. 1547]
demised to Robert Arden, Selborne Grange, for twenty years. Kent
vi'1. — Index of Leases. — G. W.
512
ANTIQUITIES
not easily solved, since the usage has long survived the
knowledge of the intention thereof. We can only suppose
that as the prior, besides tliurset and pillory, had also J ureas,
a power of life and death, that he might have reserved
this little eminence as the place of execution for delinquents.
And there is the more reason to suppose so, since a spot
just by is called Gaily (Gallows) Hill.
The lower part of the village next the Grange, in which
is a pond and a stream, is well known by the name of
WAY LEADING TO GRACIOUS STREET.
Gracious Street, an appellation not at all understood.
There is a lake in Surrey, near Chobham, called also
Gracious Pond ; and another, if we mistake not, near Hed-
leigh, in the county of Hants. This strange denomination
we do not at all comprehend, and conclude that it may be a
corruption from some Saxon word, itself perhaps forgotten.
It has been observed already, that Bishop Tanner was
mistaken when he refers to an evidence of Dodsworth, " DC
mercatu et FERIA de Seleburne." Selborne never had a
chartered fair ; the present fair was set up since the year
1681, by a set of jovial fellows, who had found in an old
OF bELBOENE. 513
almanack that there had been a fair here in former days on the
1st of August; and were desirous to revive so joyous a
festival. Against this innovation the vicar set his face, and
persisted in crying it down, as the probable occasion of
much intemperance. However the fair prevailed ; but was
altered to the 29th of May, because the former day often
interfered with wheat harvest. On that day it still con-
tinues to be held, and is become a useful mart for cows and
calves. Most of the lower housekeepers brew beer against
this holiday, which is dutied by the excisemen ; and their
becoming victuallers for the day without a license is over-
looked.
Monasteries enjoyed all sorts of conveniences within
themselves. Thus at the Priory, a low and moist situation,
there were ponds and stews for their fish : at the same place
also, and at the Grange in Culver Croft,1 there were dove-
houses ; and on the hill opposite to the Grange the prior
had a warren, as the names of The Coney Crofts and Coney
Croft Hanger plainly testify.2
Nothing has been said as yet respecting the tenure or
holding of the Selborne estates. Temple and Norton are
manor farms and freehold ; as is the manor of Chapel near
Oakhanger, and also the estate at Oakhanger House and
Blackmoor. The Priory and Grange are leasehold under
Magdalen College, for twenty-one years, renewable every
seven : all the smaller estates in and round the village are
copyhold of inheritance under the college, except the little
remains of the Grurdon manor, which had been of old leased
out upon lives, but have been freed of late by their present
lord, as fast as those lives have dropped.
Selborne seems to have derived much of its prosperity
from the near neighbourhood of the Priory. For monas-
teries were of considerable advantage to places where they
had their sites and estates, by causing great resort, by pro-
curing markets and fairs, by freeing them from the cruel
oppression of forest laws and by letting their lands at easy
' Culver, as has been observed before, is Saxon for a pigeon — G. W.
2 A warren was an usual appendage to a manor. — G, W.
L L
514 ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE.
rates. But, as soon as the convent was suppressed, the
town which it had occasioned began to decline, and the
market was less frequented ; the rough and sequestered
situation gave a check to resort, and the neglected roads
rendered it less and less accessible.
That it had been a considerable place for size formerly
appears from the largeness of the church, which much
exceeds those of the neighbouring villages ; by the ancient
extent of the burying ground, which, from human bones
occasionally dug up, is found to have been much encroached
upon ; by giving a name to the hundred ; by the old founda-
tions and ornamented stones, and tracery of windows that
have been discovered on the north-east side of the village ;
and by the many vestiges of disused fish-ponds still to be
seen around it. For ponds and stews were multiplied in the
times of popery, that the affluent might enjoy some variety
at their tables on fast days; therefore the more they
abounded the better probably was the condition of the inha-
bitants.
POEMS,
SELECTED FROM THE MSS. OF THE
REV. GILBERT WHITE.
POEMS.
THE INVITATION TO SELBORNE.
EE Selborne spreads her boldest beauties
round,
The varied valley, and the mountain ground,
Wildly majestic ! what is all the pride
Of flats, with loads of ornament supplied ?
Unpleasing, tasteless, impotent expense,
Compared with Nature's rude magnificence.
Arise, my stranger, to these wild scenes haste ;
The unfinished farm awaits your forming taste :
Plan the pavilion, airy, light, and true ;
Through the high arch call in the lengthening view ;
Expand the forest sloping up the hill ;
Swell to a lake the scant, penurious rill ;
Extend the vista, raise the castle mound
In antique taste with turrets ivy-crowned ;
O'er the gay lawn the flowery shrub dispread,
Or with the blending garden mix the mead ;
Bid China's pale, fantastic fence, delight;
Or with the mimic statue trap the sight.
Oft on some evening, sunny, soft, and still,
The muse shall lead thee to the beach-grown hill,
To spend in tea the cool, refreshing hour,
Where nods in air the pensile, nest-like bower j1
1 A kind of arbour on the side of a hill.— G. W.
518 POEMS.
Or where the Hermit hangs the straw-clad cell,5
Emerging gently from the leafy dell ;
By Fancy planned ; as once th' inventive maid
Met the hoar sage amid the secret shade ;
Romantic spot ! from whence in prospect lies
Whatever of landscape charms our feasting eyes ;
The pointed spire, the hall, the pasture-plain,
The russet fallow, or the golden grain,
The breezy lake that sheds a gleaming light,
Till all the fading picture fail the sight.
Each to his task • all different ways retire ;
Cull the dry stick ; call forth the seeds of fire ;
Deep fix the kettle's props, a forky row,
Or give with fanning hat the breeze to blow.
Whence is this taste, the furnished hall forgot,
To feast in gardens, or the unhandy grot ?
Or novelty with some new charms surprises,
Or from our very shifts some joy arises.
Hark, while below the village-bells ring round,
Echo, sweet nymph, returns the soften' d sound ;
But if gusts rise, the rushing forests roar,
Like the tide tumbling on the pebbly shore.
Adown the vale, in lone, sequestered nook,
Where skirting woods imbrown the dimpling brook,
The ruined Convent lies ; here wont to dwell
The lazy canon midst his cloistered cell ;2
While papal darkness brooded o'er the land,
Ere Reformation made her glorious stand :
Still oft at eve belated shepherd-swains
See the cowl'd spectre skim the folded plains.
To the high Temple would my stranger go,3
1 A grotesque building, contrived by a young gentleman, who used
on occasion to appear in the character of a hermit. — G. W.
2 The ruins of a priory, founded by Peter de Rupibus, Bishop of
Winchester. — G. W.
3 The remains of a preceptory of the Knights Templars ; at least it
was a farm dependant upon some preceptory of that order. I find it
was a preceptory, called the Preceptory of Suclington; now called
Southington. — G. W.
POEMS. 519
The mountain-brow commands the woods below ;
In Jewry first this order found a name,
When madding Croisades set the world in flame ;
When western climes, urged on by pope and priest,
Pour'd forth their millions o'er the deluged east :
Luxurious knights, ill suited to defy
To mortal fight Turcestan chivalry.
Nor be the Parsonage by the muse forgot ;
The partial bard admires his native spot ;
Smit with its beauties, loved, as yet a child,
(Unconscious why) its scapes grotesque, and wild.
High on a mound th' exalted gardens stand,
Beneath, deep valleys scooped by Nature's hand.
A Cobham here, exulting in his art,
Might blend the General's with the Gardener's part;
Might fortify with all the martial trade
Of rampart, bastion, fosse, and palisade ;
Might plant the mortar with wide threatening bore,
Or bid the mimic cannon seem to roar.
Now climb the steep, drop now your eye below,
Where round the blooming village orchards grow;
There, like a picture, lies my lowly seat,
A rural, shelter'd, unobserved retreat.
Me far above the rest Selbornian scenes,
The pendent forests, and the mountain greens
Strike with delight ; there spreads the distant view,
That gradual fades till sunk in misty blue :
Here Nature hangs her slopy woods to sight,
Rills purl between, and dart a quivering light.
520
POEMS.
SELBORNE HANGER.
A WINTER PIECE.
TO THE MISS BATTIES.
HE Bard, who sang so late in blithest strain
Selbornian prospects, and the rural reign,
Now suits his plaintive pipe to saddened tone,
While the blank swains the changeful year
bemoan.
How fallen the glories of these fading scenes !
The dusky beech resigns his vernal greens,
The yellow maple mourns in sickly hue,
And russet woodlands crowd the darkening view.
Dim, clustering fogs involve the country round,
The valley and the blended mountain-ground
Sink in confusion; but with tempest- wing
Should Boreas from his northern barrier spring,
The rushing woods with deafening clamour roar,
Like the sea tumbling on the pebbly shore.
When spouting rains descend in torrent tides,
See the torn Zigzag weep its channeled sides :
Winter exerts its rage ; heavy and slow,
From the keen east rolls on the treasured snow ;
Sunk with its weight the bending boughs are seen,
And one bright deluge whelms the works of men.
Amidst this savage landscape, bleak and bare,
Hangs the chill Hermitage in middle air;
Its haunts forsaken, and its feasts forgot,
A leaf-strown, lonely, desolated cot !
Is this the scene that late with rapture rang,
Where Delphy danced, and gentle Anna sang;
With fairy -step where Harriet tripp'd so late,
And on her stump reclined the musing Kitty sato ?
POEMS. 521
Return, dear Nymphs ; prevent the purple spring,
Ere the soft nightingale essays to sing ;
Ere the first swallow sweeps the freshening plain,
Ere love-sick turtles breathe their amorous pain ;
Let festive glee th' enlivened village raise,
Pan's blameless reign, and patriarchal days ;
With pastoral dance the smitten swain surprise,
And bring all Arcady before our eyes.
Return, blithe maidens ; with you bring along
Free, native humour, all the charms of song,
The feeling heart, and unaffected ease,
Each nameless grace, and every power to please.
Nov. 1, 1763.
ON THE RAINBOW.
" Look upon the rainbow, and praise him that made it : very beautiful
is it in the brightness thereof." — Eccles. xliii. 11.
N morning or on evening cloud impressed,
Bent in vast curve, the watery meteor shines
Delightfully, to the levelled sun opposed :
Lovely refraction ! while the vivid brede
In listed colours glows, th' unconscious swain
With vacant eye gazes on the divine
Phenomenon, gleaming o'er the illumined fields,
Or runs to catch the treasures which it sheds.
Not so the sage, inspired with pious awe ;
He hails the federal arch ; l and looking up
Adores that God, whose fingers formed this bow
Magnificent, compassing heaven about
With a resplendent verge, " Thou madest the cloud,
Maker Omnipotent, and thou the bow ;
And by that covenant graciously hast sworn
1 Gen. ix. 12—17.
522 POEMS.
Never to drown the world again:1 henceforth,
Till time shall be no more, in ceaseless round,
Season shall follow season : day to night,
Summer to winter, harvest to seed time,
Heat shall to cold in regular array
Succeed/'' — Heaven- taught,, so sang the Hebrew bard.2
A HARVEST SCENE.
jAKED by the gentle gleamings of the morn>
Soon clad, the reaper, provident of want,
Hies cheerful-hearted to the ripen' d field ;
Nor hastes alone ; attendant by his side
His faithful wife, sole partner of his cares,
Bears on her breast the sleeping babe ; behind,
With steps unequal, trips her infant train :
Thrice happy pair, in love and labour joined !
All day they ply their task ; with mutual chat,
Beguiling each the sultry, tedious hours.
Around them falls in rows the sever'd corn,
Or the shocks rise in regular array.
But when high noon invites to short repast,
Beneath the shade of sheltering thorn they sit,
Divide the simple meal, and drain the cask :
The swinging cradle lulls the whimpering babe
Meantime ; while growling round, if at the tread
Of hasty passengers alarm'd, as of their store
Protective, stalks the cur with bristling back.
To guard the scanty scrip and russet frock.
1 Gen. viii. 22. 2 Moses.
POEMS. 529
ON THE
DARK, STILL, DRY, WARM WEATHER,
OCCASIONALLY HAPPENING IN THE WINTER MONTHS.
HE imprisoned winds slumber, within their
caves
Fast bound: the fickle vane, emblem of
change,
Wavers no more, long settling to a point.
All Nature nodding seems composed : thick steams
From land, from flood updrawn, dimming the day,
" Like a dark ceiling stand : " slow through the air
Gossamer floats, or stretched from blade to blade
The wavy network whitens all the field.
Pushed by the weightier atmosphere, up springs
The ponderous mercury, from scale to scale
Mounting, amidst the Torricellian tube.1
While high in air, and poised upon his wings,
Unseen, the soft, enamoured woodlark runs
Through all his maze of melody ; the brake
Loud with the blackbird's bolder note resounds.
Sooth' d by the genial warmth, the cawing rook
Anticipates the spring, selects her mate,
Haunts her tall nest-trees, and with sedulous care
Repairs her wicker eyrie, tempest torn.
The ploughman inly smiles to see upturn
His mellow glebe, best pledge of future crop.
With glee the gardener eyes his smoking beds :
E'en pining sickness feels a short relief.
The happy schoolboy brings transported forth
His long forgotten scourge, and giddy gig :
1 The barometer.
524 POEMS.
O'er the white paths he whirls the rolling hoop,
Or triumphs in the dusty fields of taw.
Not so the museful sage : abroad he walks
Contemplative, if haply he may find
What cause controls the tempest's rage, or whence
Amidst the savage season winter smiles.
For days, for weeks, prevails the placid calm.
At length some drops prelude a change : the sun
With ray refracted bursts the parting gloom ;
When all the chequered sky is one bright glare ,
Mutters the wind at eve : the horizon round
With angry aspect scowls : down rush the showcrsr
And float the deluged paths, and miry fields.
APPENDIX.
TEN LETTERS
FBOM
THE REV. GILBERT WHITE, M.A,
TO
ROBERT MAESHAM, F.R.S.
1790-1793.
^ITOP
EDITOR'S NOTE.
0 the "Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' So-
ciety" is due the credit of having first made
public the ten Letters from Gilbert White
to Robert Marsham which are here re-
printed.
By singular good fortune these letters were discovered
amongst other family records in the possession of the Eev.
H. P. Marsham, of Rippon Hall, near Norwich, a great
grandson of the gentleman to whom they were addressed,
and with great liberality he placed them at the disposal of
the Society in whose " Transactions " they have been re-
cently published,1 together with the corresponding replies
from Marsham to White, the originals of which, are in the
possession of Mr. Bell of Selborne.
Robert M irsham, of Stratton Strawless, Norfolk, to whom
these letters were addressed, is already known to most
readers of White's writings as a correspondent to whose
opinions the latter often referred in terms of respect. His
leisure hours were devoted chiefly to arboriculture, and he
delighted in making experiments on the growth of forest
trees, the results of which he communicated from time to
time to the "Philosophical Transactions" of the Royal
Society, of which learned body he was a Fellow. The " In-
dications of Spring," of which he left such a remarkable
1 " Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society."
1876, vol. ii. pp. 133-195.
528 EDITOR'S NOTE.
register, and which has been continued by his family with
one slight interruption from the year 1736 to the present
time, afforded an annually recurring topic for correspon-
dence, while his taste and opportunities for studying nature,
led him to make many observations On rural subjects, the
extent and variety of which may be inferred from the
comments which they evoked from White. He died in
September, 1797.
By a curious coincidence, the only letter from Marsham
to White hitherto published (that is, until the Norfolk
Society printed those recently discovered) is one dated
"Stratton, 24th July, 1790," to which the first of the
present series, written on the 13th August of the same
year, is, in part at least, a reply.
This letter will be found at p. 356 of the present volume.
It first appeared, under the head of Observations on Vege-
tables, in White's " Calendar of Nature," which was published
after his death by Aikin in 1795, and which has been since
appended to almost every edition of the ' c Natural History
of Selborne," although it formed no part of the original
work.
The tenth letter of the new series is of especial interest,
as having been penned only eleven days before White's
death, which took place on the 26th June, 1793 ; and hence
it may be regarded as the last of his agreeable essays on
Natural History, which to English readers must ever re-
main as delightful in style as they are instructive in
matter.
It only remains to add that the notes appended to the
following letters are those which, at the request of the " Nor-
folk and Norwich Naturalists' Society," were written by me
in the spring of the present year, for publication in the
above-mentioned " Transactions."
J. E. HARTING.
August, 1876.
LETTER I.
TO EGBERT MARSH AM, ESQUIRE.
SELBOENE, NEAR ALTON, HANTS, Aug. 13, 1790.
S an author I have derived much satisfaction
from your kind and communicative letter;
and am glad to hear that my book has
found its way into Norfolk, and that it has
fallen into the hands of so intelligent and
candid a reader as yourself, whose good word may contri-
bute to make it better known in those parts. I am glad
that you happened to mention your most estimable friend
the late Dr. Stephen Hales/ because he was also my most
1 A memoir of Dr. Stephen Hales, extracted from Butler's " Memoirs
of Bishop Hildersley," with an engraving from an original portrait, and
a facsimile of his handwriting, will be found in the "Gentleman's
Magazine" for Jan., 1799 (p. 9). Born in 1677, this celebrated philo-
sopher and divine was the grandson of Sir Robert, and brother of Sir
Thomas Hales, Bart., of Bekesbourne, in the county of Kent. Educated
at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he was admitted a Fellow
in 1702, he was appointed first to the cure of Teddington, then to the
rectory of Porlock, in Somersetshire, and ultimately, in 1722, to the
rectory of Farringdon, near Alton, the adjoining parish to that in which
Gilbert White resided. In addition to a treatise on "Vegetable
Staticks," which was translated into French by Buffon, as well as into
Italian, German, and Dutch, and a practical work on " Ventilators," he
indited numerous sermons and tracts in the cause of temperance, and
published several scientific papers in the " Philosophical Transactions "
of the Royal Society, of which learned body ho was elected a Fellow in
M M
530 NATURAL HISTORY
valuable friend, and in former days near neighbour during
the summer months. For though his usual abode was at
Teddington, yet did he for many years reside for about
two months at his rectory of Faringdon, which is only two
miles from hence ; and was well known to my grandfather
and father, as well as to myself. If I might presume to
say that what you see respecting the copulation of toads is,
I think, a mistake, you will pardon my boldness ; because
the amours carried on in pools and wet ditches in the
spring time are performed by frogs, which are more black
and bloated at that season than afterwards. As to toads,
they seem to be more reserved in their intrigues.1
With regard to the annual increase of swallows, and that
those that return bear no manner of proportion to those
that depart ;2 it is a subject so strange, that it will be best
for me to say little. I suppose that nature, ever provident,
intends the vast increase as a balance to some great devas-
tations to which they may be liable either in their emigra-
tions or winter retreats. Our swifts have been gone about
a week P but the other hirundines have sent forth their first
broods in vast abundance; and are now busied in the
rearing of a second family. Myself and visitors have often
paid due attention to the oak in the Holt, which ought
1717. In the sixth letter of the present series it will be seen that
allusion is made in some detail to the philosophical pursuits in which he
was wont to engage. He died 4th Jan. 1761.
The family of Hales was originally seated at Hales Place, in Halden,
Kent, whence they were usually called " at-Hale." Nicholas at-Hale,
or Hales, lived there at the latter end of the reign of Edward III. See
Hasted' s " History of Kent," vol. ii. p. 576 (1782), and vol. iii. p. 716,
(1790). — ED.
1 See Letter XVII. to Pennant, and the notes thereto, p. 61. — ED.
2 This observation occurs, nearly in the same words, in Letter
XXXIX. to Daines Barrington, p. 247. — ED.
3 The early retreat of the swift, " so many weeks before its con-
geners," is a circumstance to which White has frequently alluded. See
Letter XXVI. to Pennant, p. 90. Elsewhere he remarks, "they
usually withdraw within the first week of August." See Letter
XXXVII. to Pennant, p. 114. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 531
indeed to have been noticed in my book, and especially as
it contains some account of that forest.1 You have been
an early planter indeed ! and may safely say, I should
think, that no man living can boast of so large an oak
of his own planting !2 As I had reason to suppose that
actual measurement would give me the best idea of your
tree, I first took the girth of my biggest oak, a single tree,
age not known, in the midst of my meadow : when though
it carries a head that measures twenty-four yards three
ways in diameter ; yet is the circumference of the stem only
10ft. Gin. I then measured an oak, standing singly in a
gentleman's outlet at about two miles distance, and found it
exactly the dimensions of yours. After such success you
may well say with Virgil,
"Et dubitant homines serere, atque impendere curas?"
In an humble way I have been an early planter myself.
The time of planting, and growth of my trees are as follows :
—Oak, in 1731, 4ft. 5 in. ; ash, in!731, 4ft.6Jin.; spruce
fir, in 1751, 5 ft. ; beech, in 1751, 4 ft.; elm, in 1750, 5 ft.
3 in.; lime, in 1756, 5 ft. 5 in.3 Beeches with us, the most
lovely of all forest trees, thrive wonderfully on steep,
sloping grounds, whether they be chalk or freestone. I am
in possession myself of a beechen steep grove on the free-
stone, that I am persuaded would please your judicious eye ;
in which there is a tree that measures fifty feet without
bough or fork, and twenty-four feet beyond the fork ; there
are many as tall. I speak from long observation when I
assert, that beechen groves to a warm aspect grow one-
third faster than those that face to the N. and N.E., and
1 See Letter IX. to Pennant, pp. 29-32, and the " Observations on
Vegetables," pp. 356-357.— ED.
2 This oak of Marsham's will be found noticed in the " Observations
on Vegetables," p. 356, where White has quoted a letter from Marsham
on the subject, dated " Stratton, 24 July, 1790," to which it would seem
the present letter is a reply. — ED.
3 These dates and measurements, with a slight discrepancy, have been
published in the " Observations on Vegetables " p. 356, above referred
to. — ED.
532 NATURAL HISTORY
the bark is much more clean and smooth.1 About thirty or
forty years ago the oaks in this neighbourhood were much
admired, viz., in Hartley Wood, at Temple, and Blackmoor.*
At the last place, the owner, a very ancient yeoman,
through a blameable partiality, let his trees stand till they
were red-hearted and white-hearted three or four feet up
the stem. We have some old edible chestnut trees in this
neighbourhood ; but they make vile timber, being always
shakey, and sometimes cup-shakey.3
As you seem to know the Fern-owl, or Churn- owl, or
Eve-jar, I shall send you, for your amusement, the following
account of that curious, nocturnal, migratory bird.4 The
country people here have a notion that the Fern-owl, which
they also call Puckeridge, is very injurious to weanling
calves by inflicting, as it strikes at them, the fatal distemper
known to cow-leeches by the name of puckeridge. Thus
does this harmless, ill-fated bird fall under a double imputa-
tion, which it by no means deserves ; — in Italy of sucking
the teats of goats, where it is called Caprimulgus ; and with
us, of communicating a deadly disorder to cattle. But the
truth of the matter is, the malady above-mentioned is
occasioned by a dipterous insect called the oestrus bovis,
which lays its eggs along the backs of kine, where the
maggots, when hatched, eat their way through the hide of
1 See the " Observations on Vegetables," p. 358. — ED.
2 " The oaks of Temple and Blackmoor stand high in the estimation
of purveyors, and have furnished much naval timber ; while the trees
on the freestone grow large, but are what workmen call shaky, and so
brittle as often to fall to pieces in sawing." Letter I. to Pennant, p. 4.
—ED.
3 This term is explained, in the " Observations on Vegetables "
(p. 359), to mean that the wood is " apt to separate in round pieces
like cups." — ED.
4 This account will be found already published in the " Observations
on Birds," under the head of " Fern-Owl, or Goatsucker" (pp. 334-335),
and as it is in the same words, it is probably extracted from the notes
which White had collected for a history of this bird to be published in
the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. See the 4th letter
in the present series, p. 542. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 533
the beast into it's flesh, and grow to a large size.1 I have
just talked with a man, who says, he has been employed,
more than once, in stripping calves that had dyed of the
puckeridge : that the ail, or complaint, lay along the chine,
where the flesh was much swelled, and filled with purulent
matter. Once myself I saw a large, rough maggot of this
sort squeezed out of the back of a cow. An intelligent
friend informs me, that the disease along the chines of
calves, or rather the maggots that cause them, are called by
the graziers in Cheshire worry brees, and a single one worry
bree. No doubt they mean a breeze, or breeze, the name for
the gad-fly, or oestrus, the parent of these maggots, which
lays its eggs along the backs of kine.
But to return to the fern-owl. The least attention and
observation would convince men that these poor birds
neither injure the goat-herd, nor the grazier; but that
they are perfectly harmless, and subsist alone on night-
moths, and beetles ; and through the month of July mostly
on the scarabceus solstitialis, the small tree-beetle, which in
many districts flies and abounds at that season. Those that
we have opened have always had their craws stuffed with
large night moths, and pieces of chafers ; nor does it any-
wise appear, how they can, weak and unarmed aa they are,
inflict any malady on kine, unless they possess the powers
of animal magnetism, and can affect them by fluttering over
them. Upon recollection it must have been at your house
that the amiable Mr. Stillingfleet kept his " Calendar of
Flora " in 1755.2 Similar pursuits make intimate and
1 In letter XXXI Y. to Pennant (p. 107 and note), as well as in the
" Observations on Insects and Vermes," (p. 349,) this insect is noticed
by White under the name (Estrus curvicauda. At the date of his
former letter, March 30th, 1771, he seems to have been unaware that it
had been described by Linnaeus as (Estrus bovis, but this impression was
evidently altered before the date of the present letter to Marsham. — ED.
2 This was so. Stillingfleet refers to him as his " very worthy and
ingenious friend Robert Marsham," and speaks in high terms of the hos-
pitable treatment that he experienced at Stratton. See the fifth letter
of the present series, p. 545. The " Calendar of Flora," made in 1755
534 • NATURAL HISTORY
lasting friendship. As I do not take in the R. S. T.1 I will
with pleasure accept of your present of a copy of your
" Indications of Spring." Hoping that your benevolence
will pardon the unreasonable length of this letter, on which
I look back with some contrition, I remain, with true
esteem,
Your most humble servant,
GIL. WHITE.
Any farther correspondence will be deemed an honour.
LETTER II.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Jan. 18th, 1791.
iS your long silence gave me some uneasiness
lest it should have been occasioned by indis-
position ; so the sight of your last obliging
letter afforded me much satisfaction in pro-
portion.
I was not a little pleased to find that your friend Lord
Suffield corroborated the account of the Cuckoo given by
Mr. Jenner, whose relation of the proceedings of that
peculiar bird is very curious, new, and extraordinary.2 It
does not appear from your letter that you endeavoured to
revive the Swallow, which fell down before your parlour-
window. I have not yet done with trees, and shall there-
and published in 1761, will be found alluded to in Letter XII. to Pen-
nant, p. 44. — ED.
1 Royal Society's "Transactions," better known perhaps as the
" Philosophical Transactions." — ED.
2 Dr. Jenner's "Observations on the Natural History of the Cuckoo "
will be found in the "Philosophical Transactions" for 1778, pp. 219-
237.— ED.
OF SELBORNE. 535
fore add, that my tall seventy-four feet beech measures six
feet in the girth at two feet above the ground. Beeches
seem to me to thrive best on stoney, or chalkey cliffs, where
there seems to be little or no soil. Thus about a mile and
an half from me to the S.E. in an abrupt field, stand four
noble beech-trees on the edge of a steep, rocky ravine, or
water-gulley, the biggest of which measures 9 ft. 5 in. at
four feet from the ground. Their noble branching heads,
and smooth rind show that they are in the highest vigour
and preservation. Again the vast bloated, pollard, hollow
beeches, mentioned before, stood on the bare, naked end of
a chalky promontory, many of which measured from twenty
to thirty feet in circumference ! they were the admiration
of all strangers. How has prevailed the notion that all old
London was built with chestnut ? It is with us now vile
timber, porous, shakey, and fragile, and only fit for the
meanest coopery purposes. Yet have I known it smuggled
into Portsmouth dock as good ship building oak ! 1
The more I observe and take notice of the best oaks now
remaining in this neighbourhood, the more I am astonished
at the oak which you planted yourself. For there is a most
noble tree of that kind near Hartely house, which I caused
to be measured last week ; when behold, at four feet above
the ground the girth proved to be only 14 ft., when yours
measured 12 ft. 6 in. ! Why this fine shafted tree, with
its majestic head, escaped the axe thirty years ago, when
Sir Simeon Stuart felled all its contemporaries, I cannot
pretend to say. If you ever happen to see the Hamadryad
of your favourite oak, pray give my respects to her. She
must be a fine venerable old lady. For a diverting story
respecting an Hamadryad, see the " Spectator/' vol. 8, p. 128.
Behind my house I have got an outlet of seven acres laid
1 In his " Observations on Vegetables " (p. 359), White has remarked,
" The timber and bark of these trees are so very like oak, as might,
easily deceive an indifferent observer. * * * Chestnut sells for half the
price of oak ; bat has sometimes been sent into the King's docks, and
passed off instead of oak." — ED.
536 NATURAL HISTORY
out in walks by my father. As the soil is strong, the
hedges, which are cut-up, are prodigious. The maples
about thirty-five feet in height, and the hazels, and white-
thorns twenty, which, when feathered to the ground, were
beautiful : but they now, being fifty years old, have rather
over-stood their time ; and besides, the severity of Decem-
ber, 1784, has occasioned irreparable damages among the
branches. Thus much for trees. Lord Stawell has lately
sent me such a bird, sprung and shot in his coverts, as I
never saw before, or shall again. I pronounced it to be a
mule, bred between a cock pheasant and a pea-hen.1
You say woodcocks in their passage strike against light-
houses on your coast : a gentleman tells me, that at Penzance
sea-fowls frequently dash in the night against windows
where they see a light. My well is sixty-three feet in
depth ; yet in very dry seasons, as last autumn, it is nearly
exhausted : yet you would be surprised to see how few
inches of rain falling will replenish it again.2 How do rains
insinuate themselves to such depths ? The rains this win-
ter have been prodigious ! In November last seven inches ;
in December six inches. The whole rain at Selborne in
1790 was thirty-two inches. Sure such thunder, and
lightning, and winds have never fallen out within your ob-
servation in one winter ! Had I known you thirty years
ago, I should have been much pleased; because I would
have gone to have seen you ; and perhaps you might have
been prevailed on when all our timber was standing, to have
returned the visit. In the year 1746 I lived for six months
1 This was a hybrid between the Blackcock and Pheasant. It is
noticed in the " Observations on Birds," under the head of " Hybrid
Pheasant " (p. 326), where the author states that Mr. Elmer, of Farn-
ham, the famous game painter, was " employed to take an exact copy of
this curious bird." The picture was subsequently presented to Gil-
bert White by Lord Stawell (see Jesse's " Gleanings," second series,
p. 159), and was engraved for the second edition of his works, where
it will be found in vol. ii. p. 173. — ED.
2 Sixty-three feet is stated to be the average depth of the wells at
Selborne, which, when sunk to that depth, seldom fail. See Letter I. to
Pennant (p. 4.) — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 537
at Thorney in the Isle of Ely, to settle an executorship,
and dispose of live stock ; there I lost nine oxen by their
eating yew, as mentioned in my book.1 I hope you will
write not long hence. With the truest respect and esteem
I remain,
Your most humble servant,
GIL. WHITE.
The dark butterfly which you saw was the papilio urticce :
it is often more early than the yellow papilio rhamni. At
this moment the Barometer stands somewhat below 28 in.
5 tens ! the rain this day has been very great from the
S.E.
LETTER III.
TO ROBERT MARSH AM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Feb. 25th, 1791.
;T was elegantly remarked on our common
friend, and my quondam, neighbour Doctor
Stephen Hales, by one who has written his
character in Latin, that — " scientiam philo-
sophicam usibus humanis famulari jussit." 2
The observation was just, and the assertion no inconsider-
able compliment : for undoubtedly speculative enquiries can
bear no competition with practical ones, where the latter
profess never to lose sight of utility.
1 See Letter Y. on the Antiquities of Selborne, p. 420. — ED.
2 This line was written by Dr. John Burton, and will be found in
his " Opuscula Miscellanea Metrico-Prosaica" (1771) p. 55. Dr
Burton has himself been eulogized as " a man whose liberality of senti-
ment always induced him to pay public respect to those whom he es-
teemed deserving of it." See the "Gentleman's Magazine," April, 1780,
p. 166.— ED.
538 NATURAL HISTORY
As I perceive you loved the good old man, I do not know
how I can amuse you better, than by sending you the fol-
lowing anecdotes respecting him, some of which may not
have fallen within your observation.1 His attention to the
inside of ladies' tea-kettles, to observe how far they were
incrusted with stone (tophus lebetinus Linnaei) that from
thence he might judge of the salubrity of the water of their
wells : — his advising water to be showered down suspicious
wells from the nozle of a garden watering-pot in order to
discharge damps, before men ventured to descend ; — his
directing air-holes to be left in the out-walls of ground
rooms, to prevent the rotting of floors and joists; — his
earnest dissuasive to young people, not to drink their tea
scalding hot ; his advice to watermen at a ferry, how they
might best preserve and keep sound the bottoms or floors
of their boats; — his teaching the housewife to place an
inverted tea- cup at the bottom of her pies and tarts to pre-
vent the syrop from boiling over, and to preserve the juice ;
— his many though unsuccessful attempts to find an ade-
quate succedaneum for yeast or barm, so difficult to be
procured in severe winters, and in many lonely situations ; —
his endeavour to destroy insects on wall-fruit-trees by
quick-silver poured into holes bored in their stems ; and his
experiments to dissolve the stone in human bodies, by, as
I think, the juice of onions ; — are a few, among many, of
those benevolent and useful pursuits on which his mind was
constantly bent. Though a man of a Baronet's family, and
of one of the best houses in Kent,2 yet was his humility so
prevalent, that he did not disdain the lowest offices, pro-
vided they tended to the good of his fellow creatures. The
last act of benevolence in which I saw him employed was,
at his rectory of Faringdon, the next parish to this, where
I found him in the street with his paint-pot before him, and
1 An extract from Hales's " Haemastatics " (p. 360) will be found
embodied by White in note to his Sixth Letter to Pennant (p. 18).
—ED.
2 See note 1 to the first letter in the present series. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 539
much busied in painting white with his own hands the tops
of the foot-path posts, that his neighbours might not be in-
jured by running against them in the dark. His whole
mind seemed replete with experiment, which of course gave
a tincture, and turn to his conversation, often somewhat
peculiar, but always interesting. He used to lament to my
father, how tedious a task it was to convince men, that
sweet air was better than foul, alluding to his ventilators ;
and once told him, with some degree of emotion, that the
first time he went on board a ship in harbour at Portsmouth,
the officers were rude to him ; and that he verily believed
he should never have prevailed to have seen his ventilators
in use in the Royal Navy, had not Lord Sandwich, then First
Lord of the Admiralty, abetted his pursuits in a liberal
manner, and sent him down to the Commissioners of the
dock with letters of recommendation. It should not be
forgotten that ou,. friend, under the patronage of Sir Joseph
Jekyll, was instrumental in procuring the Gin Act, and
stopping that profusion of spirituous liquors which threat-
ened to ruin the morals and constitutions of our common
people at once.1 He used to say, that the hogs of distillers
were more brutal than the hogs of other men ; and that,
when drunk, they used to bite pieces out of each other's
backs and sides ! With due respects I remain,
Your most humble servant,
GIL. WHITE.
I did myself the honour of writing to you very lately
about trees, and other matters. This winter continues wet
and mild : wet springs are bad for Selborne. My crocuses
make a fine show.
1 The name of Dr. Stephen Hales, says his biographer, is to be re-
membered with respect as an early advocate of Temperance, in the
cause of which, as before stated, he indited numerous sermons and
tracts. — ED.
540 NATURAL HISTORY
LETTER IV,
TO EGBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, NEAR ALTON, Dec. 19, 1791.
OUR letter, which met me so punctually in
London, was so intelligent, and so enter-
taining, as to have merited a better treat-
ment, and not to have been permitted to
have lain so long unnoticed !
That there is no rule without an exception is an observa-
tion that holds good in Natural History : for though you
and I have often remarked that Swifts leave us in general
by the first week in August : yet I see by my journal of this
year, that a relation of mine had under the eaves of his
dwelling house in a nest a young squab Swift, which the
dam attended with great assiduity till September 6th;1 and
on October 22nd, I discovered here at Selborne three young
martins in a nest, which the dams fed and attended with
great affection on to November 1st, a severe frosty day, when
they disappeared, and one was found dead in a neigh-
bour's garden. The middle of last September was a sweet
season ! during this lovely weather the congregating flocks
of house martins on the church tower were very beautiful
and amusing. When they flew off all together from the roof
on any alarm they quite swarmed in the air. But they soon
1 The length of stay which the Swifts make with us in autumn must
in some measure depend upon the locality which they frequent during
the summer, for in the parish of Harting, Sussex (not a dozen miles from
Selborne), I have remarked during the last ten years that these birds
invariably remain until the end of the first week in September, or at
least a month after the average date of their departure as observed
by White at Selborne. See Letter XXXVII. to Pennant (p. 114).
—ED.
OF SELBORNE. 541
settled again in heaps on the shingles ; where preening
their feathers, and lifting up their wings to admit the rays
of the sun, they seemed highly to enjoy the warm situation.
Thus did they spend the heat of the day, preparing for their
migration, and as it were consulting when and where they
are to go ! The flight about the church consisted chiefly of
house martins, about 400 in number : but there were other
places of rendezvous about the village frequented at the same
time. The swallows seem to delight more in holding their
assemblies on trees. Such sights as these fill me with en-
thusiasm, and make me cry out involuntarily,
" Amusive birds ! say where your hid retreat,
When the frost rages, and the tempests beat ! "
We have very great oaks here on absolute sand. For
over Wolmer Forest, at Bramshot Place, where I visit, I
measured last summer three great hollow oaks, which made
a very grotesque appearance at the entrance of the ave.nue,
and found the largest twenty-one feet in girth at five feet
from the ground. The largest sycamore in my friend's
court measures thirteen feet. His edible chestnuts grow
amazingly, but make (for some have been felled) vile shaky,
cup-shaky timber.2 I think the oak on sands is shaky, as
it is also on our rocks, as I know by sad experience the last
time I built. The indented oaken leaf which you gathered
between Eome and Naples was the quercus cerris of Linnaeus.3
The yellow oak which you saw in Sussex escaped my notice.
Richard Muliman Trench Chiswell, Esq., of Portland
Place, and M.P., tells a friend of mine in town that he has
an elm in Essex for which he has been bid £100. It is
long enough, he says, to make a keel ungrafted for a man-
of-war of the largest dimensions. As he expressed a desire
1 These original lines occur in " The Naturalist's Summer Evening
Walk," which White dedicated to Pennant, see p. 83. — ED.
2 See note 3, to the first letter of the present series, p. 530. — ED.
3 This, the Turkish oak, was introduced into this country about a
century ago, from the south of Europe, and is now much planted as an
ornamental tree. — ED.
542 NATURAL HISTORY
of corresponding with me, I have written to him, and de-
sired some particulars respecting this amazing tree.
You seem to wonder that Mr. Willughby should not be
aware that the Fern-owl is a summer bird of passage. But
you must remember that those excellent men, Willughby
and Ray, wrote when the ornithology of England, and in-
deed the Natural History, was quite in its infancy. But
their efforts were prodigious, and indeed they were the
Fathers of that delightful study in this kingdom. I have
thoughts of sending a paper to the R. S. respecting the
fern-owl, and seem to think that I can advance some par-
ticulars concerning that peculiar, migratory, nocturnal bird,
that have never been noticed before. The rain of October
last was great, but of November still more. The former
month produced 6 in. 49 hund., but the latter upwards of
8 in., 5| of which fell in one week, viz., from Nov. 13th to
the 19th, both inclusive ! You will, I hope, pardon my
neglect and write soon. 0, that I had known you forty
years ago !
I remain, with great esteem,
Your most humble servant,
GIL. WHITE.
My tortoise was very backward this year in preparing
his hybernaculum, and did not retire till towards the be-
ginning of December.1 The late great snow hardly reached
us, and was gone at once.
1 In previous years this " old Sussex tortoise began first to dig the
ground, in order to the forming its hybernaculum, on Nov. 1st" (Letter
XIII. to Daines Barrington, p. 172), and " retired under ground about
the 20th of November." (Letter XVII. to Daines Barrington, p. 190.)
It was not until April, 1780, that White was able to announce to his
friend that the animal had become his property. (Letter L. to Daines
Barrington, p. 276.)
This tortoise survived its master about a year, dying, it is believed,
in the spring of 1794, after an existence in England of about fifty-four
years, the last fourteen of which were spent at Selborne. Its shell, which
is still preserved at Selborne, in the residence of the former owner, is
considered by Mr. Bell to be that of Testudo marginata. See antca,
pp. 277-278. — ED.
OF SELBOENE. 543
LETTER V.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, March 20th, 1792.
OU, in a mild way, complain a little of Pro-
crastination : but I, who have suffered all
my life long by that evil power, call her the
Daemon of Procrastination, and wish that
Fuseli, the grotesque painter in London,
who excells in drawing witches, daemons, incubus's, and
incantations, was employed in delineating this ugly hag,
which fascinates in some measure the most determined and
resolute of men.
You do not, I find, seem to assent to my story respect-
ing Mr. ChiswelFs elm. There may probably be some
misapprehension on my side. I will therefore allow Mr.
Chiswell that priviledge which every Englishman demands
as his right, the liberty of speaking for himself. " In regard
to my tree," says he, " it is a Wych Elm, perfectly strait,
and fit for the keel of the largest man-of-war. The pur-
veyor of the navy offered my late uncle £50 for it, although
it would have cost as much more to have conveyed it to
Portsmouth ; and he would have run all risque of soundness.
1 1 grows about eleven miles from Saffron Walden, in a deep
soil, and near thirty from Cambridge, the nearest place for
water-carriage. I will measure it next summer." He adds,
' ' I have been, and am a considerable planter, and have been
honoured with three gold medals from the Society of Arts/'
&c. Thus far Mr. Chiswell.
As I begin to look upon you as a Selborne man, at least
as one somewhat interested in the concerns of this place,
I wish that you could see " The sixth Eeport of the Com-
missioners appointed to enquire into the state and condition
of the Woods, Forests, &c. of the Crown," &c. This Report
544 NATURAL HISTORY
was printed February, 1790; though never published, but
distributed among the members of the House of Commons,
from some of whom you may borrow it, as I have done.
This curious survey will inform you, from the best authority,
of all the circumstances respecting the advantages, usages,
abuses, &c. of our Forest of Alice Holt and Wolmer. Here
you will see, that the Forest now consists of 8,694 acres,
107 of which are in ponds ; that the present timber is esti-
mated at £60,000/ that it is almost all of a size, and about
100 years old • that it is shamefully abused by the neighbour-
ing poor, who lop it and top it as they please ; that there is
no succession because all the bushes are destroyed by the
commoners around;2 that your old favourite oak, the Grind-
stone Oak, is estimated at twenty-seven loads of timber ; 3
that the peat cut in Wolmer is prodigious ; in the year
1788 in one walk 942 loads, and in another walk the same
year 423 loads, besides heath and fern ; and in the same
year 935,000 turves; &c. &c. &c. Lord Stawell is the
Lieutenant or Grantee; whose lease expires in 181 1, as I have
said in my book.4 That nobleman did me the honour to call
on me a morning or two ago, and sat with me two hours :
he brought me a white woodcock, milk white all over except
a few spots.
My friend at Bramshot Place, where I measured the great
1 This survey and valuation was made in 1787. Wolmer, with but
two enclosures within its precincts, then extended over 5,949 acres ; the
royal forest of the Holt, with its enclosures, was found to comprehend 2,744
acres. The timber of the Holt was valued at £61 ,000. See Letter VHI.
to Pennant, p. 27. — ED.
2 The wrong-doers in this case were the poor of the parishes of Bin-
stead and Frinsham, Bentley and Kingsley, who laid claim to " the
lop and top " in opposition to Lord Stawell, the grantee. " Forty-five
of these people his lordship served with actions." See Letter IX. to
Pennant, p. 32. — ED.
3 See antea, p. 357. — ED.
4 Letter IX. to Pennant, p. 30. On the expiration of the grant to
Lord Stawell, the Commissioners of Woods and Forests resumed posses-
sion of the Holt. All the lands held by him, and two-thirds of the former
open forest were subsequently enclosed and planted, — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 545
pollard oaks and sycamore last summer, has got a great
range of chestnut-paling ; I shall tell him what Mr. Kent
says respecting timber of that sort. The rain with us in
1791 was 44 in. 93 hund., upwards of 8 inches of which fell
in November ! the rain of the present year has been con-
siderable. Our indications of spring this year are thus:
Jan. 19, Winter Aconite blows; Jan. 21, Hepaticas blow ;
Jan. 29, Snowdrop blows; 31, Hazels; Feb. 4, Crocus blows;
13, Brimstone Butterfly ; 21, Yellow Wagtail appears ; 26,
Humble Bee; March 16, Daffodil blows, and Apricot; 19,
Peaches and Nectarines. I have read BoswelPs " Johnson"
with pleasure. As to Bishop Home I knew him well for
near forty years, he has often been at my house. Stilling-
fleet, I see, wrote his " Calendar of Flora/' at your house;
he speaks in high terms of the hospitable treatment that he
experienced at Stratton.1
Wonderful is the regularity observed by nature ! I have
often remarked that the smallest willow wren (see my Book),
called here the Chif-chaf, from its two loud sharp notes, is
always the first spring bird of passage, and that it is heard
usually on March 20,2 when behold, as I was writing this very
page, my servant looked in at the parlour door, and said
that a neighbour had heard the Chif-chaf this morning! !
These are incidents that must make the most indifferent look
on the works of the Creation with wonder !
My old tortoise lies under my laurel hedge, and seems as
yet to be sunk in profound slumbers.3 You surprise me,
when you mention your age : your neat hand and accurate
language would make one suppose you were not fifty. I re-
main, with true esteem,
Your most obliged servant,
GIL. WHITE.
1 See the first letter of the present series, and note 2, p. 533. — ED.
2 The substance of this remark will be found already published in the
"Observations on Birds" (p. 334), under the head of "Chiff-chaff:'
—ED.
3 See p. 542, note 1.— ED.
N X
546 NATURAL HISTORY
When Mr. Townsend avers that the Nightingales at Yalez l
sing the winter through, I should conclude that he took up
that notion on mere report, because I had a brother who
lived eighteen years at Gibraltar, and who has written an
accurate Natural History of that rock, and its environs.
Now, he says that Nightingales leave Andalusia as regularly
towards autumn as other summer birds of passage. A pair
always breeds in the Governor's garden at the Convent.
This history has never been published, and probably now
never will, because the poor author has been dead some
years. There is in his journals such ocular demonstration
of swallow emigration to and from Barbary at Spring and
Pall, as I know, would delight you much. There is an Hi-
rundo hiberna that comes to Gibraltar in October and de-
parts in March, and abounds in and about the Garrison the
winter through.2
LETTER VI.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, August 7, 1792.
HILE all the young people of this neighbour-
hood are gone madding this morning to the
great last day's review at Bagshot, I am
sitting soberly down to write to my friend
in Norfolk ; almost forgetting, now I am
old, the impulse that young men feel to run after new
1 Townsend (" Travels in Spain ") wrote " Velez," f. e. Velez Malaga,
an older city than the present Malaga, on the old main road to Granada.
-ED.
2 See Letter XXXII. to Pennant (p. 102), where White identifies his
brother's bird, and correctly so, with the Hirundo rupestris of Scopoli.
It is again mentioned by him in the seventh letter of the present series.
— KD.
OF SELBORNE. 547
sights ; and that I myself, in the year 1756, set off with a
party at two o' the clock in the morning to see the Hessian
troops reviewed on a down near Winchester. While I was
writing the sentence above, my servant, and some neigh-
bours came down from the hill, and told me that they could
not only hear the discharges of the ordnance and small arms,
and see the volumes of smoke from the guns, but that
they could also, they thought, smell the scent of the gun-
powder, the wind being N.E., and blowing directly from
the scene of action at Wickham bushes, though they are in
a direct line more than twenty miles from hence.
As I had written to you as long ago as March, I began to
fear that our correspondence was interrupted by indisposition
— when your agreeable letter of July 14th came in, and
relieved me from my suspense. You do me much honour
by calling one of your beeches after my name. Linnaeus
himself was complimented with the Linncea borealis by one
of his friends, a mean, trailing, humble plant, growing in the
steril, mossy, shady wilds of Siberia, Sweden, an4 Eussia;
while I am dignified by the title of a stately Beech, the
most beautiful and ornamental of all forest trees.1 The
reason, I should suppose, why your trees have not encreased
in growth and girth this summer is the want of heat to
expand them. I have not this year measured my firs
in circumference; but they have, I see, many of them, made
surprising leading shoots. My account of the Fern-owl, or
Eve-jarr, was prevented by Madam Procrastination, who, a
jade, lulled me in security all the spring, and told me I had
time enough and to spare, till at last I found that the R. S.
meetings were prorogued till the autumn ; 2 against which I
1 The genus Linnc&a was characterized by Dr. Gronovius, and first
published as a genus in 1737 in the first edition of Linnaeus " Genera
Plantarum." In the same year appeared the " Flora Lapponica," in
which a good figure of the plant will be found, as well as in the " Flora
guecica," published in 1745. Only one species of the genus is known,
the Linncea borealis, above mentioned. — ED.
2 The meetings of the Royal Society, for whose "Transactions" the
account of the Fern-owl was intended. See p. 532, note 4. — ED,
548 NATURAL HISTORY
hope to be ready: and as I have got my materials, trust
that when I do set about the business " verba haud invita
sequentur." By all means get a sight of the sixth Report
of the Commissioners, &c. : it will entertain you, and furnish
you. with much matter, and many anecdotes respecting
Selborne, of which I could have availed myself greatly had
they been printed before I published my work.1 My book
is gone to Madras, and several to France, and one to Swit-
zerland, and one copy is going to China with Lord Macartney,
but whether some Mandareen will read it, I know not. We
have a young gent, here now on a visit, the son of our late
Yicar Etty, who assures me, that at Canton he has seen the
Chinese reading English books; and has heard them
converse sensibly on the manners and police of this kingdom.
The Chif-Chaf of this village is the smallest willow wren of
iny History.2 Once I had a spaniel that was pupped in a
rabbit burrow on the verge of Wolmer forest. Though I
have long ceased to be a sportsman, yet I still love a dog ;
and am attended daily by a beautiful spaniel with long ears,
and a spotted nose and legs, who amuses me in my walks
by sometimes springing a pheasant, or partridge, and
seldom by flushing a woodcock, of late become with us
a very rare bird. Remember the story of Py lades and
Orestes ; and do not say that exalted friendship never
existed among men. Chif-Chaf, the first bird of passage,
was heard here March 20 ; Swallow was seen, March 26 ;
Nightingale and Cuckoo, April 9 ; House Martins, April 12;
Redstart, April 19; Swift, April 14; Fern-owl heard May
19; Fly-catcher, the latest summer bird, May 20. We
have experienced a very black wet summer, and solstice ;
but none of those floods and devastations mentioned in the
newspapers ! Indeed we know no floods here, but frequent
rains. Yet in warm summers we have as fine melons, and
grapes, and wall-fruit as I have ever seen. July at an
average produces the most rain of any English month.
1 This Report was printed in February, 1790. See p. 542. — ED.
* See Letter XVI. to Pennant, p. 56, note 2. — ED.
OF SELPORNE. 549
This last measured 5 in. and 15 h. Pray, good Sir, procure
better ink ; yours is so pale, that it often renders your neat
hand scarcely legible ! I ani now offering my intelligent
young neighbours sixpence for every authentic anecdote
that they can bring me respecting Fern-owls; and will
give you the same sum for the same information. As I
was coming over our down after sunset lately, a cock bird
amused us much by flying round and settling often on the
turf. As he passed us, he often gave a short squeak, or
rather whistle. We were near his nest. These, like other
birds of passage, frequent the same spots.1 There are
always three pairs on our hill every year. Did you know
Sir John Cullum of your part of the world ? He was an
agreeable, worthy man, and a good antiquary. I was also well
acquainted with your late good Bishop Home : he has often
been at my house. I concur with you most heartily in your
admiration of the harmony and beauty of the works of
the creation ! Physico-theology is a noble study, worthy the
attention of the wisest man ! Pray write. Our Swifts have
behaved strangely this summer : for. the most part there
were but three round the church, except now and then of a
fine evening, when there were thirteen. They seem to be
all gone. House-martins leave Gibraltar by the end of
July ! I conclude with all due regard.
Your humble servant
GIL. WHITE.
[On the back of this letter is endorsed in the handwriting of Mr.
Marsham the following description of a " Wall-creeper," which he
obtained at Stratton, and which will be found referred to in Letters
VIII. and IX. of the present series. — " Bird six inches from bill end
to tail tip, and eleven inches from tip of wings. The bill very slender,
and -f- an inch long (the sign -j- was often employed by Mr. Marsham to
signify "more than"). Body cinereous. Wings near the body chiefly
red and fading to near black. The quill feathers have two large spots,
the outmost white, the lesser yellow. Stratton, Oct. 30, 1792."
1 That is, the spots which they have frequented in former years.
This has been ascertained to be true of Nightingales, Swallows, Swifts,
aud some other birds. — ED.
550 NATURAL HISTORY
Mr. Marsham, in narrating the circumstances of its capture,
says : —
" My man has just now shot me a bird, which was flying about my
house : I am confident I have never seen its likeness before. But on
application to Willughby, I conclude it is the Wall-creeper, or Spider-
catcher. I find he had not seen it in England.* It is very beautifully
coloured, though the chief is cinereous ; but the shades of red on the
wings, and the large spots of white and yellow, on the quill feathers, are
uncommonly pleasing. You see Willughby does not mention them." ]
LETTER VII.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, November 3, 1792.
extract from the Natural History of Gib-
raltar by the late Eeverend John White:2 —
" In the first year of my residence at Gib-
raltar, which was 1756, it appeared extra-
ordinary to me to see birds of the Swallow
kind very frequent in the streets all the winter through.
Upon enquiry I was told that they were Bank Martins : and
having at that time been but little conversant in Natural
History, they passed with me as such for some years with-
out any farther regard. At length, when I had taken a
more attentive survey of the physical productions of this
climate, I soon discovered these birds to be none of the
common British species described by authors ; and I farther
found that they were never seen in Gibraltar through the
whole course of the summer ; but constantly and invariably
1 Willughby' s words are : — " In Anglia nostra earn invenire aiunt,
quamvis nobis nondum fuerit conspecta" (" Ornithologia," 1676, p. 99).
—ED.
2 Another extract from this unpublished MS. was communicated to
Daines Barrington, Letter LIII., p. 282.— ED.
OF SELBORNE. 551
made their first appearance about the 18th and 20th, and
once as early as the 12th of October, and remained in great
abundance until the beginning of March.
" These phenomena awakened and alarmed my curiosity
as events entirely new and unheard of among the body of
Ornithologists, and induced me to be particularly exact and
attentive in my observations on every part of their conduct.
Early in the autumn vast multitudes of these martins con-
gregate in all parts of the town of Castillar, which is situate
on the summit of a precipice most singularly lofty and ro-
mantic, about twenty miles north of Gibraltar. Hence it
may be inferred that they build and breed on the inland
mountains of Andalusia and Grenada. But on the approach
of winter, when their summer habitations become bleak and
inhospitable (for all those mountains are then usually
covered with snow), they retreat to these warm shores, and
remain there till the snow is gone next spring. A few are
always to be seen about our hill by the middle of October,
shifting round to all sides of the rock at times to avoid the
wind. November 2, 1771, I saw several, with some young
ones among them sitting in groups, on the cliffs, where the
old ones came and fed them."
Thus have I, for your amusement, according to promise,
sent you an extract concerning this new, and unnoticed
swallow, which my brother, with great propriety, in his
work has called Hirundo hyemalis / and has given several
particulars concerning it, and a description of it, too long
for the compass of a letter.
Permit me just to hint to you, that I wrote to you some
time ago in answer to your last letter, which gave me much
satisfaction.
I forgot to mention in the extract, that these winter
swallows usually leave Gibraltar about the beginning of
March, unless deep snows ,(as is sometimes the case, and
1 In his twenty-second letter to Pennant (p. 102), and in the fifth
letter of the present series, the species is named hyberna. The above
name hyemalis possibly is a lapsus memoria.—Ev.
552 NATURAL HISTORY
was particularly so in 1770 and 1772) fall in Spain about
that time ; and then they linger there till the latter end of
the month.
Surely, my dear Sir, we live in a very eventful time, that
must cut-out much work for Historians and Biographers !
but whether all these strange commotions will turn out to
the benefit or disadvantage of old England, God only
knows ! We have experienced a sad spring, summer, and
autumn; and now the fallows are so wet, and the land-
springs break forth so frequently, that men cannot sow their
wheat in. any comfort. Our barley is much damaged ; and
malt will be bad.
Have you read Mr. Arthur Young's " Travels through
France ? " He says, p. 543, when speaking of the French
clergy — " One did not find among them poachers, or fox-
hunters, who having spent the morning in scampering after
hounds, dedicate the evening to the bottle, and reel from
inebriety to the pulpit/' Now, pray, who is Mr. Young ;
is he a man of fortune, or one that writes for a livelihood ?
He seems to reside in Suffolk, near Bury S. Edmund ; so
probably you can tell me somewhat about him.
Pray do wood-peckers ever damage and bore your timber-
trees ? Not those, I imagine, of your own planting, but
only those that are tending to decay. I had a brood this
year in my outlet hatched, I suspect, in the bodies of some
old willows. My dissertation on the Caprimulgus is almost
finished.
I remain, with all due respect, and esteem,
Your most obedient and obliged servant,
GIL. WHITE.
OF SELSORNE. 553
LETTER VIII.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
UR two last letters seeni as if they had crossed
each other on the road ; but whether they
conversed when they met, does not appear.
If you have got the Certhia murarittf or
true Wall-creeper, you are in possession of a
very rare and curious bird. For in all my researches here
at home for fifty years past, and in all the vast collections
that I have seen in London, I have never met with it. No
wonder that the great Mr. Willughby is not very copious
on the subject, for he acknowledges fairly that he had not
seen it ; though he supposes it may be found in this island.1
The best person I can refer you to is, Dr. John Antony
Scopoli, a modern, elegant, foreign naturalist, born in the
Tyrol, but late deceased in Pavia, where he was professor of
Botany. This curious and accurate writer was in possession
of one in his own museum, and gives the following descrip-
tion of his specimen in his " Annus primus hisiorico-natu-
ralis : " — " That its bill is somewhat longer than its shanks,
slender, and somewhat bent ; that the tongue is bifid, and
the feet consisting of three toes forward and one behind."
Again he adds, " that the upper part is cinereous, the throat
whitish ; the abdomen, wings in part, tail and feet black ; the
wings at their base, and the quill feathers at their base on one
side reddish/' " It was taken in Carniola. It is the size of
1 Willughby 's observation is as follows : — " They say it is found in
England; but we have not had as yet the hap to meet with it." His
description of the bird which he calls the Wall-creeper, or Spider-catcher,
Picus murarius, Aldrov., is borrowed from Aldrovandus, and he places
it after the Woodpeckers, and amongst the " Woodpeckers less properly
so called." (" Ornithology," Book II. p. 143, tab. 23.)— ED.
554 NATURAL HISTORY
the common creeper, or Gerthia familiaris : l its nostrils
oblong, tail cinereous at the point, the first four quill feathers
distinguished on the inner side by two white spots. " He
concludes thus : " Migrat solitario sub finem autumni ; turres
et muros sedium altiorum adit ; araneas venatur ; saltitando
candit ; volatu vago et incerto fertur volucris nmta." You
are sure, I trust, that your bird is not the Sitta Europoea.
or Nut-hatch.
I have written so soon, that you may examine your bird
well again, before the specimen decays. Your lady's turkey-
hen is a most prolific dame; and must, I think, lay herself
to death. You persist very laudably in your curious experi-
ments on trees. Whenever you recommend my book, which
begins to be better known, you lay me under fresh obliga-
tions. I am writing my account of the Fern-owl, and en-
deavouring to vindicate it from the foul imputation of being
a Caprimulgus. My letter will make a fierce appearance
with a quotation from Aristotle, and another from Pliny, but
whether the R. S. will read it, or whether afterwards they
will print it I know not.2
With all good wishes for your health and prosperity, I
remain
Your obliged and humble servant,
GIL. WHITE.
SELBORNE Nov. 20th, 1792.
1 Scopoli (op. cit. p. 51) says, "Statura sittoe" that is, the size of the
Nut-hatch. — ED.
2 The history of the Fern-owl, so long contemplated and so frequently
alluded to, unfortunately it would seem was never completed, the author
dying within six months after the date of this letter. — ED.
OF SELBORNE. 555
LETTER IX.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SELBORNE, Jan. 2, 1793.
Y best thanks are due for your RAIN IN 1792
kind letter of December 21, in. Hun.
to which I shall pay proper ^an- • 6-7
attention presently. But I -^e^- • 1-68
shall speak first of the margin Mar- • 6"70
of this, which contains the rain of last year, Apr. . 4-8
which was so remarkably wet, that you may May • 3-0
be, perhaps, glad to see what proportion the Jun© • 2-78
fall of water bears to that of other uncom- ^UV • 5-16
fortable, unkindly years. The rain in 1782, Au£- • 4'25
as you see in my book, was 52 inches ; in Sep. . 5-53
1789, 42 inches; and in 1791, 44 inches: Oct- • 5'55
yet these wet seasons had not the bad in- -Nov. . 1-65
fluence of last year, which much injured our -Ltec. . 2-11
harvest, damaged our fallows, prevented the
poor from getting in their peat and turf, which 48-oo
lies rotting in the Forest, washed and soaked
my cleft beechen wood, so that it will not burn; it prevented
our fruits from ripening. The truth is, we have had as wet
years, but more intervals of warmth and sunshine.
I am now persuaded that your bird is a great curiosity,
the very Certhia muralis, or Wall- creeper, which neither
Willughby nor Ray ever saw; nor have I, in fifty years' at-
tention to the winged creation, ever met with it either wild
or among the vast collections that I have examined in
London. It seems to be a South Europe bird, frequenting
towns, and towers, and castles, but has been found but very
seldom indeed in England.1 So that you will have the satis-
1 This statement, no doubt, is founded on Willughby 's observation
before quoted. See antea, p. 553, note 1. — ED.
556 NATURAL HISTORY
faction of introducing a- new bird of which future ornitholo-
gist swill say," found at Strattonin Norfolk by that painful and
accurate Naturalist, Robert Marsham, Esq." 1 You observe
that Scopoli does not take notice that the hind claw is about
double the length of the fore claws, but Linnaeus corrobo-
rates your remark by saying, " Ungues validi, prsesertim
posticus." You seem a little to misunderstand Scopoli re-
specting the spots on the inner side of the quill feathers : by
the inner side he does not mean the under side of the wing
next the body, but only the inner or broader web of the
quills, on which those remarkable spots are found, as appear
by the drawing. I am much delighted wioh the exact copies
sent me in the frank, and so charmingly executed by the
fair unknown, whose soft hand has directed her pencil in a
most elegant manner, and given the specimens a truly deli-
cate and feathery appearance. Had she condescended to
have drawn the whole bird I should have been doubly
gratified ! It is natural to young ladies to wish to captivate
men, but she will smile to find that her present conquest is
a very old man.
My best thanks are due for all your good offices respect-
ing my work, and in particular for your late recommendation
to the Duke of Portland.
You did not in your last take any notice of my inquiries
concerning woodpeckers, whether they ever pierce a sound
tree, or only those that are tending to decay.2 I have ob-
served that with us they love to bore the edible chestnuts ;
perhaps because the wood is softer than that of oak. They
breed in my outlet, I think in old willows. You have not
told me anything about Arthur Young. You cannot abhor
the dangerous doctrines of levellers and republicans more
than I do ! I was born and bred a gentleman, and hope I
1 A prophecy singularly verified after an interval of more than eighty
years. — ED.
2 The ability of the Green Woodpecker to pierce sound timber has
been placed beyond doubt by the testimony of more recent observers.
—ED.
OF SELBORNE. 557
shall be allowed to die such. The reason you having so
many bad neighbours is your nearness to a great, factious
manufacturing town. Our common people are more simple-
minded and know nothing of Jacobin clubs.
I admire your fortitude and resolution, and wonder that
you have the spirit to engage in new woods and plantations.
Our winter, as yet, has been mild and open, and favourable
to your pursuits. Pray present my respects to your lady,
and desire her to accept of my best wishes, and all the compli-
ments of the season, jointly with yourself. I have now
squirrels in my outlet ; but if the wicked boys should hear
of them, they will worry them to death. There is too strong
a propensity in human nature towards persecuting and de-
stroying !
I remain, with much esteem, yours, &c.,
GIL. WHITE.
LETTER X.
TO ROBERT MARSHAM, ESQUIRE.
SJELBORNE, June 15, 1793.
ROM my long silence you will conclude that
procrastination has been at work, and perhaps
not without reason. But that is not all the
cause, for I have been annoyed this spring
with a bad nervous cough, and a wandering
gout, that have pulled me down very much, and rendered
me very languid and indolent.
As you love trees and to hear about trees, you will not be
displeased when you are told that your old friend the great
oak in the Holt forest is at this very instant under particular
circumstances. For a brother of mine, a man of virtu, who
rents Lord StawelFs beautiful seat near the Holt, called
Moreland, is at this very juncture employing a draughtsman,
558 NATURAL HISTORY
a French refugee, to take two or three views of this extra-
ordinary tree on folio paper, with an intent to have them
engraved. Qf this artist I have seen some performances,
and think him capable of doing justice to the subject. These
views my brother proposes to have engraved, and will probably
send a set to you, who deserve so well of all lovers of trees,
as you have made them so much your study, and have taught
men so much how to cultivate and improve them I have
told you, I believe, before, that the great Holt Oak has long
been known in these parts by the name of the Grindstone Oak,
because an implement of that sort was in old days set up
near it, while a great fall of timber was felled in its neigh-
bourhood.
After a mild, wet winter we have experienced a very harsh
backward spring with nothing but IN", and N.E. winds. All
the Hirundines except the sand-martins were very tardy,
and do not seem even yet to make any advances towards
breeding. As to the sand-martins they were seen play-
ing in and out of their holes in a sand-cliff as early as
April 9th. Hence I am confirmed in what I have long
suspected, that they are the most early species. I did not
write the letter in the " Gent. Mag." against the tor-
pidity of swallows, nor would it be consistent with what I
have sometimes asserted so to do.1 As to your recent
1 The letter here referred to is no doubt a letter which had then
lately appeared in the " Gentleman's Magazine," dated Feb. 7th 1793,
and probably the reason why Marsham attributed this to Gilbert White
was that the writer had signed himself " A Parish Priest," and had
stated that his house was " about thirty miles from the sea-coast of
Hampshire." On the other hand it is evident that White disclaimed
the authorship because the observations of the writer in regard to the
supposed torpidity of Swallows were inconsistent with the views which
he himself had expressed in his book. See Letters X. and XXXVIII.,
to Pennant (pp. 33, 115); and Letters IX. XII. and XVIII. to Dames
Barrington (pp. 161, 171, 191).
Who then was the writer of this letter ? Not Dr. Stephen Hales, for
although at one time he resided about the same distance as White did
from the sea-coast of Hampshire, he died in 1761, or more than thirty
years before the letter in question was dated.
Apropos of letters in the " Gentleman's. Magazine" attributed to
OF SELBORNE. 559
proof of their torpidity in Yorkshire, I long to see it. But
as much writing is sometimes irksome, cannot you call in
occasionally some young person to be your amanuensis ?
There has been no such summer as this, so cold and so dry,
I can roundly assert, since the year 1765. We have had
no rain since the last week in April, and the two first days
in May. Hence our grass is short, and our spring-corn
languishes. Our wheat, which is not easily injured in strong
ground by drought, looks well. The hop-planters begin to
be solicitous about their plantations. Here I shall presume
to correct (with all due deference) an expression of the
great philosopher Dr. Derham. He says in his Physico-
theology, "that all cold summers are wet:" whereas he
should have said most.
Have you seen Arthur Young's " Example of France a
Warning to England ? " it is a spirited performance. The
season with us is unhealthy.
With true esteem I remain,
Your obliged servant,
GIL. WHITE.
[At the head of this letter is the following note in the handwriting of
Mr. Marshain : — " This worthy man died this month."
His death took place on the 26th of June, 1793, eleven days after the
date of this letter.]
Gilbert White, it is perhaps not generally known that in the volume of
that periodical for 1781 appeared a letter under the signature "V"
(since proved to have been penned by White), in which an interesting
account is given of the writer's college acquaintance at Oxford with the
poet Collins.
In the Memoir prefixed to the Aldine edition of that poet's works
(p. xxxi.), the editor has reprinted this letter entire, prefacing it with
the following remark : —
" It is here printed from the original manuscript, addressed * For Mr.
Urban. To the care of Mr. Newbery, at the corner of St. Paul's Church-
yard, London.' The letter bears the 'Alton ' postmark, and is from the
pen of Collins' s college acquaintance Gilbert White, the celebrated author
of the « Natural History of Selborne.' " — ED.
INDEX.
IMERIA, wife of
Adam Gurdon,
436, 437.
Ampelis garru-
lus, 43.
Aiine, Queen, at
Wolmer Forest, 22.
Anguis fragilis, 64.
Antiquities, 403, 405.
Ants, 352.
Aphides, shower of, 283.
A rum eaten by thrushes, 54.
Ashford, Thomas, prior of Sel-
borne, 491.
Ash-trees, 358.
Asses ploughing, 210.
Auk, Little, near Alresford, 119.
Aurora Borealis, 365.
Ayles Holt, alias Alice Holt, the
forest of, 29.
Barker, Thomas, some account of,
14, 78.
Barometer, 3G3.
- remarkable fall of, 301, 304.
Barometers, Selborne and Newton,
compared, 298, 307.
South Lambeth, 298.
Barragon, 16.
Barrington, Daines, some account
of, Intro.
Barrows, ancient, 405.
Bats, 40, 41, 84, 90, 112.
Bats, drink on the wing, 41.
- the large sort, 90, 112.
note on the species, 113.
Beans sown by birds, 361.
Beaufort, Bp. of Winchester, 469.
Bee-bird, 162.
Beeches, 358.- 2.. 3,
Bees, wild, 348.
Bells, church, 417.
Berne, alias Bernes, Peter, Prior
of Selborne, 475, 487.
Besoms, 219.
Bin's, or Bean's-parsonage, 422.
- pond, 26.
Birds assuming male plumage, 327
- instinct of, 288, 289.
of summer passage, 59, 136,
137.
— foreign species imported,
98.
removing dung of nestlings,
182, 183.
migrations of, 161, 163.
- migratory, at Gibraltar, 103.
soft-billed, 137.
of winter passage, 138.
in song before Midsummer,
141.
in song after Midsummer,
140.
singing at night, 139.
singing as they fly, 142.
breeding most early, 142.
0 O
562
INDEX.
Birds, why fatter in frosts, 150.
congregating of, 158, 170.
- motions of, 253, 255.
notes of, 255, 256.
observations on, 125, 319,
320.
Bird's-nest ophrys, 251.
Blackbird, 54, 121, 306.
Blackcap, 35, 40, 95, 124, 145, 149,
152.
Black cock, hybrid, 326.
Black game, 20.
Black spring of 1771, 365.
Blackthorn, 360.
Blatta orientalis, 344.
Blind-worm, 64.
Bog-oak, 18, 19.
Bog-plants, 27.
Bombylius mcdius, 351.
Botany, 247, 248.
- of Selborne, 249, 253.
Bot-fly, 107, 108.
Brimstone-lodge, 26.
Brooks at Selborne, 3.
Buck's Horn Oak, 357.
Bug, harvest, 106.
Bull-head, 39.
Bullfinch turning black, 54, 118.
Bunting, 47.
— snow, 54, 88.
Bustards, 143, 156.
Butcher-bird, red backed, 70, 116.
great grey, 116.
- woodchat, 86, 1 16.
Buzzard, honey, 130, 320.
Buzzards, 253.
Calculus from stomach of ox, 111.
Calendar, Naturalist's, 377, 402.
Canary birds, 44.
Cancer, reputed cure for, 67.
Cane, or Weasel, 53, 121.
Caprimulgus, 76, 78, 84, 113, 114,
123, 151, 335.
Carex cespitosa, 26.
Carp, 28.
Castration, 230.
Cat and leveret, 232.
Cat and squirrel, 318.
Cats, electric, 308.
fond of fish, 96
Caterpillars of the oak, 346.
Chafers, 80, 81, 113, 123, 335, 343
Chaffinch, 46, 54, 118, 147, 157.
Chalk hills, 187, 225.
Chestnut timber, 359.
Chiff chaff, 54, 334.
Chough, 117, 156.
Church, Selborne, 410, 411.
Churn-owl, 84.
Cimex linearis, 345.
Clouds, morning, cause of, 365.
Cob- webs, 211,213.
Coccus vitis viniferce, 281, 282.
Cockscomb, 8.
Cock-roach, 344.
Coins, Roman, 29, 406.
Coluber natrix, 65.
Coots, 255.
Corn-mills, 504.
Cornua Ammonis, 9.
Cranes, 255, 257.
Cricket, field, 84, 264, 265, 266.
267.
house, 268, 269, 345.
— mole, 270, 271, 272.
Crocus, 252.
Crossbill, 39, 156, 189.
Crow, 117, 122, 130, 254.
Royston or grey, 166.
Cuckoo, 83, 146, 147, 155, '227.
note of, 167, 168.
Cucumbers set by bees, 361.
Curlew, stone, 55, 72, 83, 86, 90.
104, 105, 296, 334.
Cyprinus, 285.
Dabchick, or Little Grebe, 255.
Daker-hen, or Landrail, 14, 328.
Daws, 73, 74, 75, 171, 190, 254.
Deer, 21, 22,23.
- red, in Wolmer Forest, 21,
22.
fallow, in Holt Forest, 30,
31.
their spiracula, 51,
Deer-stealing, 23, 24.
Dipper, 99, 156.
INDEX.
£63
Divers 255, 331, 333.
great northern, 331.
Dogs, 293, 294.
Chinese, 293.
Domesday book, 407, 410.
Dorr, 84.
Dove, ring, 132, 147, 211, 254,256,
329.
rock, 132, 133.
stock, 73, 117, 132, 166.
Dovehouse, 504, 513.
Downs, Sussex, 2, 186, 187.
Dragon-flies, 156, 200.
Dripping weather, 365.
Duck with silver collar, 163.
Ducks, 26, 28, 40, 255.
Eagles, 256.
Earth-worms, 234, 353.
Echoes, 24: , 245, 297.
Eels, 28, 39, 121.
Eft, 63, 68.
Elm, broad -leaved, 5.
Empides, 352.
Ephemera, 83, 347.
Etty, Kev. Andrew, vicar of Sel-
borne, 416.
Fair at Selborne, 512.
Fail-wise, prior of Selborne, 485.
Fairy rings, 362.
Falcon, peregrine, 36, 37, 41, 291,
292.
Fern-owl, 113, 114, 151, 228, 254,
256, 334.
Fieldfare, 87, 92, 158, 160, 166.
nesting of, 159.
Filices, 13.
Fishes in the forest ponds, 28.
in Selborne streams, 39.
gold and silver, 284, 285.
Fleas, 180, 200.
Flies, house, 351.
Flora of Selborne, 249, 253
Fly, bacon, 106.
bot, 107, 108.
forest, 180.
horse, 180, "11.
Fly, ichneumon, 350.
May, 83, 347.
nose, 349.
Flycatcher, 34, 40, 58, 95, 124,
152, 175.
Fog, 364.
Fossils of Selborne, 8, 9.
Foxes, 27.
Freestone, 10.
Frog, 61, 63.
tree, 63.
Frost of January, 1768, 299.
- of January, 1776, 302.
- of December, 1784, 306.
- partial, 363.
Garlands, 412.
Gasterosteus aculcatus, 39, 66.
pungiti "is, 66.
Geese, wild, 88, 255, 257.
Geology of Selborne, 4, 10, 12.
German silk-tail, 43.
Gipsies, 215, 216.
Glow-worm, 84, 353.
Goatsucker, 76, 78, 84. 113, 123,
254, 256, 334.
Goldfinch, 149.
Gorgonia, 8.
Gossamer, 211, 213.
Gracious Street, 512.
Grange, the, 511.
Grasses, 249.
Grasshopper, 84, 264.
Warbler, 58, 95, 121.
Gray hen, 21.
Greatham, the manor farm of, 24.
Grebe, Little, or Dabchick, 255.
Greenfinch, 254.
Grindstone Oak, in the Holt Forest,
357.
Grosbeak, 38, 341.
Gryllus domesticus, 268, 269, 345.
Gurdon, Sir Adam, 435, 436, 439,
441, 442, 444.
Hanger, the, 2, 10, 14, 20, 130,
520.
Hares, 13, 83, 303, 304, 308.
564 INDEX.
Hares, Scotch and Irish, 88.
white, 88.
Harvest scene, 522.
Hawfinch, or Grosbeak, 38, 341.
Hawk, sparrow, 121, 130, 175.
Hawks, 162, 174, 210, 256.
Hawkley Hanger, 261, 263.
- Mill, 443.
Haws, 43.
Haze, 310.
Hazel, wych, 5
Heath cock, 20
Heath-fires, 18, 25.
Hedge-hog, 91.
Hedge-sparrows, 121, 126, 147,
150.
Heliotropes, summer and winter,
259.
Hen harrier, 121, 228, 253, 330.
Heron, 76, 254.
Heronry at Cressi Hall, 76.
Himantopus, 273, 274.
Hippobosca hirundinis, 180, 280.
Hirundines, 154, 162, 174, 179,
181, 186, 188, 190, 200, 202, 207,
209, 237, 280, 286.
Hirundo rupestris at Gibraltar, 102.
Hogs, 231.
Hollow lanes, 12.
Holt, Ayles, a royal forest, 29.
Honey-dew, 309, 310, 364.
Hoopoe, 37, 38, 162.
Hops, 211, 360.
Horse, 319.
Horse-fly, 107, 108.
Hounds, 319.
House-sparrow, 95, 122.
Howe, General, 32.
Humming in the air, 342.
Huxham, Dr., 297.
Hybrid pheasant, 326.
Ichneumon fly, 350.
Ichthyology, 74.
Idiot, strange propensity of, 220.
Indian grass, 77.
Insects in frost, 305.
observations on, 281, 341.
Instinct, 288, 289.
| Invitation to Selborne, 517.
I Ivy berries, 360.
! Jackdaw, 73, 74, 75, 171, 190.
Jay, 254.
Johanna, heiress of Sir Adam
Gurdon, 445, 449.
Juniper, American, 301.
Kestrel, 121, 175, 253.
Kingfisher, 254.
Kites, 162, 253.
Knights Templars at Selborne, 41 4
446.
; Kuckahn, 154.
I
Lacerta*, 66.
Lakes, 27.
Lampern, 39, 66.
Land-rail, 14, 328.
Land-slips, 261.
Land springs, 196, 261.
Lanes, hollow, 12.
Langeland, Robert, 474.
Langrish, Nicholas, 500.
Lapwing, 119, 171.
Lark, 88, 255.
grasshopper, 58, 95, 121.
- sky, 165, 255.
wood, 84, 255.
white, 54.
Lavants, 196, 261.
Leaves, renovation of, 358.
Lepers, 237, 239.
Leprosy, 237, 239.
Leveret suckled by a cat, 232.
Leverian Museum, 8, 195, 219.
Lilellula, 156, 200.
Lime blossoms, 359.
Linnets, 47.
Lizard, 66, 71.
green, 75, 78.
Loaches from Ambresbury, 67.
Longspee, Ela, 451, 453.
Macroglossa stellatarum, 348.
Magpie, 210, 254, 322.
Mallard, 323.
Malm, black, 3.
INDEX.
565
Malm, white, 4.
Manors and lands of the Priory, \
479.
Markwick, William, some account |
of, Intro.
Marsham, Robert, 356.
Martin, house, 33, 34, 40, 44, 74, j
95, 113, 115, 118, 181, 185, 236,
247, 279, 286.
- sand or bank, 197, 198, 199,
202, 255, 337.
May-bug, 343.
May-fly, 83, 347.
Mazell, Peter, 66.
Melolontha fullo, 80, 81.
vulgaris, 80.
Mice, 40, 42, 50, 55, 122
Migration of birds, 161, 163.
— at Gibraltar, 163
Miller s thumb, 39.
Mills, water, 505.
Minnows, 66.
Mirage, 364.
Miscellanies, 279.
Missel thrush, 44, 117, 210, 254.
Mist called London smoke, 364.
Mole, 121.
Monuments, 415, 416.
Moorhen, 255.
Moose-deer, 93, 98.
Morton, John, prior of Selborne,
483.
Mouse, harvest, 42, 50, 55.
long-tailed field, 176, 289.
Musca, chamceleon, 109.
— putris, 107.
Music, effects of, 289, 290.
Mussels, 97.
Mytilus Crista Galli, 8.
Naturalist's Calendar, 377-402.
Summer Evening Walk, 83.
Nautili, 10.
Nests, 288, 289.
Newt, or eft, water, 63, 68.
Nidification, 288.
Nightingale, 120, 164, 168.
Nightjar, 76, 78, 84, 113, 114, 123,
228.
Nore Hill, 3.
Nose fly, 349.
Nuthatch, 60, 289.
Oak, on the Plestor, 5, 439.
Oakhanger ponds, 26.
Oaks of Temple and Blackmoor,
4.
- of Losers Wood, 6.
- in the Holt, 357.
Obelisks, 259.
GEstrus curvicauda, 107, 108, 349.
Oropendola, 162.
Osprey, at Frinsham, 116.
Ostrea carinata, 9.
Otis tarda, 143, 156.
Otter, 97.
Owl, brown, 40, 179.
- white or barn, 40, 83, 96,
177, 178, 194, 254.
eagle, 88.
Owls hooting in different keys, 167,
256.
Paradise of Sclborne Priory, 502.
Parrots, 254, 256.
Partridge, 13, 19, 20, 96, 174, 306,
325.
feigning lameness, 325.
Parus, 54. See Titmouse.
Peacocks, 110, 111, 257.
Pectines, 10.
Pennant, some account of, Intro.
Perch, 28.
Peregrine, 36, 37, 41, 291, 292.
Pettychaps, 290.
Phalcena quercus, 346.
Pheasant, 13, 27.
- hybrid, 326.
Pigeons, 96, 254.
Plants, rare, of Selborne, 249, 253
Plestor, the, 5, 439, 440.
Plover, the stilt, 273, 275.
Poems> 515.
Polytrichum commune, 219.
Pond, Bin's or Bean's, 26.
Ponds, 26, 27, 28.
Poplar galls, 359.
Porch, church, 417.
566
INDEX.
Portugal laurel, 301, 305.
Poultry, 257, 258, 323.
Preceptory at Selborne, 414, 450.
Sudington, 446.
Priors of Selborne, 491.
forms of choosing, 453, 457.
Priory of Selborne, 428, 429.
Ptinus pectinicornis, 343.
Puckeridge, 334.
Pulveratrices, 155.
Quail, 13, 48, 83.
Queen's bank, 22.
Rabbits, 317.
Rainbow, 521.
Rain-fall, 14.
Ranatra linearis, 346
Rat, water, 89.
Raven, 6, 7, 62, 174, 254, 256.
Redbreast, 122, 123, 127, 145, 147,
149.
Red-deer, 21.
Redstart, 40, 58, 121, 124, 152.
Redwing, 150, 159, 168, 301.
nesting of, 159.
Reed Sparrow, 145, 150, 152, 157.
Eeguli noncristati, 40, 58, 69.
Relics of the Priory, 477.
Reptiles, 61, 71.
Ring-dove, 132, 147, 211, 254, 256,
329.
Ring-ousel, 44, 70, 76, 81, 85, 99,
114, 115,116,117,156,166, 189.
Rooks, 53, 122, 171, 190, 254,256,
296, 321, 364.
— white, 53.
with frozen wings, 364.
Ruperta, 30.
Rupibus, or Roche de la, Peter de,
428.
Rushes for candles, 217, 219.
Salads, 240, 241.
Sand martin, 197, 198, 199, 202,
337.
Sandpiper, 70.
Sap, observations on, 358
Saxon months. 240
Scallops, 10.
Scarlceusfullo, 180.
— solstitialis, 343
Secta molendini, 504.
Sedge-bird, 82, 86, 120, 145.
Seeds lying dormant, 361.
Selborne Hanger, 2, 10, 14, 20,
130, 520.
Sharp, John, prior of Selborne, 489,
490, 491.
Sheep, 25, 187, 317.
- Sussex, horned and hornless,
187.
Shelldrake, 73.
Shells, fossil, 8.
Shrew, 223.
water, 89.
ash, 223.
Shrike, great grey, 116.
- red- backed, 70, 116.
woodchat, 86, 116.
Silicaria, 54, 81, 85, 88.
Sitta europcea, 60, 289.
ccesia, 289.
Skylark, 165.
in streets, 304.
Sleet, frozen, 364.
Slugs, 235.
Snails and slugs, 235, 354.
Snakes, 65, 86.
Snake's slough, 354.
Snipe, 26, 35, 40, 101, 254.
food of, 146.
— humming of, 35, 60, 119.
Snow, effects of, 303, 324.
Snow-fleck, 54, 88.
Song of birds, 139, 140, 142, 255.
Sow, fecundity of, 231, 232.
Sparrow, hedge, 121, 126, 147, loO
house, 95, 122.
- reed, 145, 150, 152, 157.
Sparrowhawk, 121, 130, 175, 258
Sphinx ocellata, 347.
stellatarum, 348.
Spring, black, 365.
Squirrels, 289, 318.
- suckled by a cat, 318
Starling, 171, 254.
Stepe, prior of Selborne, 47 P
INDEX.
607
Sticklebacks, 39.
Stilt, black-winged, 273, 275.
Stock-dove, 73, 117, 132, 166.
Stone, free, 4, 10.
rag, 11.
sand or forest, 4, 12.
yellow or rust colour, 11.
Stonechat, 118, 128.
Stone curlew, 55, 72, 83, 86, 90,
104, 105, 296, 334.
2r0/>yj7 of animals, 148, 174, 176,
194, 247.
Storm-cock, 117.
Stratiomys chamceleon, 109.
Suborbital sinuses in deer, 51.
Sudington, preceptory of, 446.
Summers, sultry, 309, 310.
Superstitions, 221.
Swallow, 33, 34, 44, 49, 79, 83, 90,
95, 113, 118, 120, 149, 151, 152,
161, 171, 180, 190, 193, 195, 209,
236, 247, 254, 256, 291, 338, 339.
supposed hybernation of, 33,
115, 161, 171, 191.
Swans, 121.
Swift, 33, 34, 40, 83, 90, 114, 118,
120, 168, 202, 208, 246, 255,
280.
alpine, or white-bellied, 104,
207.
Sycamore, 359.
Tanner's wood, 503.
Teal, 26, 28, 40, 119, 176.
Templars, Knights, at Selborne,
414, 446.
Temple, manor-house, 438.
Tench, 28.
Thaws, 363.
Thrushes, 54, 121, 150, 301, 306,
322.
Thrush, missel, 44, 117, 210, 254.
Thunderstorms, 312.
Tiles, ornamented, 502, 510.
Timber in the Holt Forest, 27.
in Wolmer Forest, 27.
fall of, 32.
value of, 27.
Tipula, 352.
Titlark, 117, 145, 147, 155, 165,
319.
Titmouse, blue, 127, 128.
- coal, 127.
— great, 122, 127, 128, 301. '
long- tailed, 127.
- marsh, 122, 127, 128.
Toads, 61, 67, 75.
venom of, 62.
Tortoise, 152, 172, 190, 236, 276,
278.
Tower, church, 417.
Tree-frog, 63.
Trees, 14, 167, 224, 225, 355
— size and growth of, 356.
Tremella nostoc, 362.
Tringa, 70.
Trout, 39.
Truffles, 362.
Tun-bridge, 504.
Turkey, 257.
Turnip-flies, 107.
Vegetables, 355.
Vespertilio altivolans, 112.
Vicarage of Selborne, 419.
Vicars of Selborne, 423, 427.
Viper, 61, 64, 229.
swallowing its young, 64.
65.
Virgin garlands, 412.
Visitatio notabilis de Seleburne,
458, 468.
Vole, water, 36, 89.
Wagtails, 47, 118, 121, 126, 145.
147, 255, 340.
Waldon-lodge, 26.
Wall-fruit, 211.
Waltham blacks, 22, 23.
Warbler, grasshopper, 58, 95
sedge, 82.
Wasps, 309, 320, 349.
Water, characteristics of hard and
soft, 4.
Water-ouzel, 99, 156.
Water-rat, 36, 89.
Wax wing, 43.
568
INDEX.
Waynfiete, William of, 475, 493,
499.
Weasel, 53, 121.
Weather, 299.
- summary of the, 367, 369.
Weaver's Down, 12.
Well-head, 3, 408.
Wells, 4.
Whaddon chapel, 503.
Wheat, 196, 362.
Wheatear, 48. 118, 128, 188, 189.
Whinchat, 118, 128.
Whitethroat, 40, 95, 123, 124, 147,
149, 152, 255.
lesser, 124, note, 291, note.
Widgeon, 28, 40.
Wild-boars, 32.
Wild-ducks, 26, 28, 176, 255, 257.
Wild-fowl, 20, 29, 40, 255.
Willow-wrens, 54, 56, 57, 58, 69,
81.
Winchester, Hoadley Bishop of,
23.
Witchcraft, 222.
Wolmer Forest, 17, 408.
Pond, 28.
Wood, fossil, 18, 19, 295.
Wood, Losel's, 6.
Woodchat, 86.
Woodcock, 13, 100, 146r 158, 160,
163, 164, 169.
carrying its young, 100, 101
- food of, 146.
— nesting, 159, 161.
Woodlark, 84, 121, 149.
Woodpecker, 126, 254, 256.
Woodpigeon, 131, 166, 211, 291.
Wormils, 335. .
Worms, 234, 353.
Wren, 122, 126, 127, 145, 149.
golden-crowned, 60, 126, 143.
— willow, 35, 121, 175.
- wood, 34, 35, 95.
Wryneck, 126, 340.
Wych-hazel, 5.
Wykeham, William of, 457, 468.
Wynchestre, John, prior of Sel-
borne, 469, 470.
Wyndesor, William, prior of Sel-
borne, 483.
Yellowhammer, 145, 149.
Yeoman-prickers, 254.
Yew-trees, 420.
why planted in churchyards,
421, 422.
Printed by Hazell, Watson, & Viney, Ld., London aud Aylesbury.
14 DAY USE
RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED
f^M Kj^JJ IhV^W ^v' : *
This book is due on the last date stamped below, or
on the date to which renewed.
Renewed books are subject to immediate recall.
1 1966
LD 21-40m-4,'64
(E4555slO)476
General Library
University of California
Berkeley