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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: THE-TOO |
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THRUSH (A. S. Prysce, Icel. priistr, Norw. Trast, O. H. Ger. Drosce, whence the mod. Ger. prossel, to be compared with the analogous English form Throstle,l now almost obsolete, both being apparently diminutives) , the name that in England seems to have been common to two species of birds, the first now generally distinguished as the song-thrush, but known in many districts as the mavis,2 the second called the mistletoe-thrush, but having many other local designations, of which more presently. The former of these is one of the finest songsters in Europe, but it is almost everywhere so common that its merits in this respect are often disregarded, and not unfrequently its melody, when noticed, is ascribed to the prince of feathered vocalists, the nightingale (q.v.). In the spring and summer there is hardly a field, a copse or a garden that is not the resort of a pair or more of song-thrushes; and the brown-backed bird with its spotted1 For many interesting facts connected with the words " thrush " and " throstle " which cannot be entered upon here, the reader should consult Professor Skeat's Etymological Dictionary. 2 Cognate with the French mauvis, though that is nowadays almost restricted to the redwing . Its diminutive is mauviette, the modern table-name of the skylark, and perhaps mavis was in English originally the table-name of the thrush.fit to journey, and at a later period they are followed by most of their parents, so that many parts of the kingdom are absolutely bereft of this species from October to the end of January. On the continent of Europe the autumnal influx of the birds bred in the North is regarded with much interest
The second species to which the name applies is distinguished as the mistletoe-thrush, or, by corrupt abbreviation, the misselthrush.3 It is known also in many districts as the " storm-cock," from its habit of singing in squally weather that silences almost all other birds, and " holm-(i.e. holly-) thrush", ; while the harsh cries it utters when angry or alarmed have given it other local names, as " screech," " shrite" and " skrike," all traceable to the Anglo-Saxon Scric.4 This is a larger species than the last, of paler tints, and conspicuous in flight by the white patches on its outer tail-feathers. Of bold disposition, and fearless of the sleety storms of spring , as of predatory birds, the cock will take his stand on a tall tree, " like an enchanter calling up the gale " (as Knapp happily wrote), and thence with loud voice proclaim in wild and discontinuous notes the fervour of his love for his mate; nor does that love cease when the breeding-season is past, since this species is one of those that appear to pair for life, and even when, later in the year, it gathers in small flocks, husband and wife may be seen in close company. In defence of nest and offspring, too, few birds are more resolute, and the daw, pie or jay that approaches with an ill intent speedily receives treatment that causes a rapid retreat , while even the marauding cat finds the precincts of the "master of the coppice," (Pen y liwyn), as the Welsh name this thrush, unsuitable for its stealthy operations. The connexion of this bird with the mistletoe, which is as old as the days of Aristotle, is no figment, as some have tried to maintain. Not only is it exceedingly fond of the luscious viscid berries, but it seems to be almost the only bird that will touch them.The thrushes form a distinct family, Turdidae, of the Oscines division of perching birds, and are now divided into five sub-families: (1) Turdinae, or true thrushes and their immediate allies, the ousel (q.v.), the fieldfare (q.v.), the redwing (q.v.), the rock-thrushes (Monticola), the wheatears, stonechats, whinchats (see WHEATEAR), the redstarts (q.v.), robins (see REDBREAST), and3 There is no doubt of the bird taking its name from the plant mistletoe (Viscum album), about the spelling of which there can be no uncertaintyA. S. Misteltan, the final syllable originally signifying twig," and surviving in the modern " tine," as of a fork or of a deer's antler. 3It seems quite possible that the word shrike, though now commonly accepted as the equivalent, in an ornithological sense, of Lanius, may have been originally applied to the mistletoe-thrush. In several of the Anglo-Saxon Vocabularies dating from the 8th to the 1 rth century, as printed by Thomas Wright
hedge-sparrows (see SPARROW ). In these, as opposed to the warblers, the young
End of Article: THRUSH (A. S. Prysce, Icel. priistr, Norw. Trast, O. H. Ger. Drosce, whence the mod. Ger. prossel, to be compared with the analogous English form Throstle,l now almost obsolete, both being apparently diminutives) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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