The Natural History of Cage Birds Their Management Habits Food Diseases Tre

Cover The Natural History of Cage Birds Their Management Habits Food Diseases Tre
The Natural History of Cage Birds Their Management Habits Food Diseases Tre
Johann Matthus Bechstein
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The difference in the song is very remarkable. The greater nightingale has a much stronger, louder, and deeper voice : but it sings more slowly and more unconnectedly ; it has not that astonishing variety, those charming protractions, and harmonious conclusions of the common night- ingale ; it mutilates all the strains ; and, on this account, its song has been compared to the missel -thrush, to which, however, it is superior in softness and pureness. The common nightingale is superior in delica...cy and variety, but inferior in force and brilliancy. The greater nightingale sings generally in the night, so that it is the real night-singer; w4iile among nightingales this is rather uncommon. Its voice is so loud that it is almost impossible to bear it in a room. It is necessary to keep it always outside the window, either by hanging its cage there, or by opening from it a sort of passage into which it can remove.
Its call is also very different ; hi ! glack arrr ! It seems also to pro- nounce David, Jacob, and generally begins its song by the latter word.


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