<h2><SPAN name="THE_WATER_THRUSH" id="THE_WATER_THRUSH"></SPAN>THE WATER THRUSH.</h2>
<p class="ac">C. C. MARBLE.</p>
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<div class="verse">I never see a skylark fly</div>
<div class="verse">Straight upward, singing, to the sky,</div>
<div class="verse">Or hear the bobolink's glad note</div>
<div class="verse">Issue with frenzy from his throat,</div>
<div class="verse">As though his very heart would break</div>
<div class="verse">In bars of music, but straight</div>
<div class="verse">I think, brave, happy bridegrooms they,</div>
<div class="verse">And this must be their wedding-day.</div>
<div class="verse ar"><i>C. C. M.</i></div>
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<p>THE water thrush (<i>Seiurus noveboracensis</i>)
has so many popular
names that it will be recognized
by most observers by one or
more of them. It is called small-billed
water-thrush, water wagtail, water kick-up,
Besoy kick-up, and river pink
(<i>Jamaica</i>), aquatic accentor, and New
York aquatic thrush. It is found
chiefly east of the Mississippi River,
north to the Arctic coast, breeding
from the north border of the United
States northward. It winters in more
southern United States, all of middle
America, northern South America, and
all of West Indies. It is accidental in
Greenland. In Illinois this species is
known as a migrant, passing slowly
through in spring and fall, though in
the extreme southern portion a few
pass the winter, especially if the season
be mild. It frequents swampy woods
and open, wet places, nesting on the
ground or in the roots of overturned
trees at the borders of swamps. Mr.
M. K. Barnum of Syracuse, New York,
found a nest of this species in the roots
of a tree at the edge of a swamp on
the 30th of May. It was well concealed
by the overhanging roots, and
the cavity was nearly filled with moss,
leaves, and fine rootlets. The nest at
this date contained three young and
one egg. Two sets were taken, one
near Listowel, Ontario, from a nest under
a stump in a swamp, on June 7,
1888; the other from New Canada,
Nova Scotia, July 30, 1886. The nest
was built in moss on the side of a
fallen tree. The eggs are creamy-white,
speckled and spotted, most
heavily at the larger ends, with hazel
and lilac and cinnamon-rufous.</p>
<p>As a singer this little wagtail is not
easily matched, though as it is shy and
careful to keep as far from danger as
possible, the opportunity to hear it
sing is not often afforded one. Though
it makes its home near the water, it is
sometimes seen at a considerable distance
from it among the evergreen
trees.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</SPAN></span></p>
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