<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>DECEMBER: THE ROBIN REDBREAST</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Of</span> all the old proverbs that are open to
argument, few offer more material for
criticism than that which has it that a good
name is more easily lost than won; and if
ever a living creature served to illustrate
the converse to the proverbial dog with a
bad name, that creature is the companionable
little bird that we peculiarly associate with
Christmas. Traditionally, the robin is a gentle
little fellow of pious associations and with a
tender fancy for covering the unburied dead
with leaves; but in real life he is a little fire-eater,
always ready to pick a quarrel with his
less pugnacious neighbours. Yet so persistently
does his good name cling, that, while
ever ready to condemn the aggressive sparrow
for the same fault, all of us have a good word
for the robin, and in few of our wild birds
are character and reputation so divergent.</p>
<p>Surely, however, the most interesting
aspect of this familiar bird is its tameness,
not to say attachment to ourselves, and so
marked is its complete absence of fear that
it is a wild bird in name only, and indeed<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span>
few cage birds are ever so bold as to perch
on the gardener's spade on the look-out for
the worms as he turns them up from the
damp soil. The robin might, in fact, furnish
the text of a lay-sermon on the fruits of
kindness to animals, and those dialectical
people who ask whether we are kind to the
robin because it trusts us, or whether, on
the other hand, it trusts us because we are
kind to it, ask a foolish question that raises
a wholly unnecessary confusion between
cause and effect. It is a question that those,
at any rate, who have seen the bird in countries
where it is treated differently will have
no difficulty whatever in answering. Broadly
speaking, the redbreast has the best time of
it in northern lands. This tolerance has not,
as has been suggested, any connection with
Protestantism, for such a distinction would
exclude the greater part of Ireland, where,
as it happens, the bird is as safe from persecution
as in Britain, since the superstitious
peasants firmly believe that anyone killing
a "spiddog" will be punished by a lump
growing on the palm of his hand. The untoward
fate of the robin in Latin countries<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span>
bordering the Mediterranean has nothing to
do with religion, but is merely the result of
a pernicious habit of killing all manner of
small birds for the table. The sight of rows
of dead robins laid out on poulterers' stalls
in the markets of Italy and southern France
inspires such righteous indignation in British
tourists as to make them forget for the
moment that larks are exposed in the same
way in Bond Street and at Leadenhall. In
Italy and Provence, taught by sad experience
the robin is as shy as any other small bird.
It has learnt its lesson like the robins in the
north, but the lesson is different. The most
friendly robin I ever remember meeting with,
out of England was in a garden attached to
a café in Trebizond, where, hopping round
my chair and picking up crumbs, it made me
feel curiously at home. Similar treatment of
other wild birds would in time produce the
same result, and even the suspicious starling
and stand-off rook might be taught to forget
their fear of us. The robin, feeding less on
fruit and grain than on worms and insects,
has not made an enemy of the farmer or
gardener. The common, too common, sparrow,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span>
is another fearless neighbour, but its freedom
from persecution, of late somewhat threatened
by Sparrow Clubs, is due less to affection
than to the futility of making any impression
on such hordes as infest our streets.</p>
<p>No act of the robin's more forcibly illustrates
its trust in man than the manner in
which, at a season when all animals are
abnormally shy and suspicious, it makes its
nest not only near our dwellings, but actually
in many cases under the same roof as ourselves.
Letterboxes, flowerpots, old boots,
and bookshelves have all done duty, and I
even remember a pair of robins, many years
ago in Kent, bringing up two broods in an
old rat trap which, fortunately too rusty to
act, was still set and baited with a withered
piece of bacon. Pages might be filled with
the mere enumeration of curious and eccentric
nesting sites chosen by this fearless bird,
but a single proof of its indifference to the
presence of man during the time of incubation
may be cited from the MS. notebooks
of the second Earl of Malmesbury, which I
have read in the library at Heron Court.
It seems that, while the east wing of that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span>
pleasant mansion was being built, a pair of
robins, having successfully brought up one
family in one of the unfinished rooms, actually
reared a second brood in a hole made for
a scaffold-pole, though the sitting bird,
being immediately beneath a plank on which
the plasterers stood at work, was repeatedly
splashed with mortar! The egg of the robin
is subject to considerable variety of type.
I think it was the late Lord Lilford who,
speaking on the subject of a Bill for the
protection of wild birds' eggs, then before
the House of Lords, gave it as his belief
that no ornithologist of repute would swear
to the name of a single British bird's egg
without positively seeing one or other of
the parent birds fly off the nest. This was,
perhaps, a little overstating the difficulty of
evidence, since any schoolboy with a fancy
for birds-nesting might without hesitation
identify such pronounced types as those of
the chaffinch, with its purple blotches, the
song-thrush with its black spots on a blue
ground, or the nightingale, which resembles
a miniature olive. Eggs, on the other hand,
like those of the house sparrow, redshank<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span>
and some of the smaller warblers, are so
easily confused with those of allied species
that Lord Lilford's caution is by no means
superfluous. Ordinarily speaking, the robin's
egg is white, with red spots at one end, but
I remember taking at Bexley, nearly thirty
years ago, an immaculate one of coffee colour.
As the robin is a favourite foster-parent
with cuckoos, my first thought was that this
might be an unusually small egg of the
parasitic bird, which was very plentiful
thereabouts. It so happened, however, that
three days after I had abstracted the first
and only egg I took from that nest, there was
a second of the same type; and, much as
I would have liked this also for my collection,
I left it in the nest so as to set all doubts at rest.
My moderation was rewarded, for no one else
found the nest, and in due course the coffee-coloured
egg produced a robin like the rest.</p>
<p>The robin is anything but a gregarious bird.
Its fighting temper doubtless leads it to keep
its own company, and we rarely see more
than one singing on the same bush, or seeking
for food on the same lawn. Yet, though it is
with us all the year, it is known to perform<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN></span>
migrations within these islands, and possibly
also overseas, chiefly connected with commissariat
difficulties, and it is probable that
on such occasions many robins may travel
in company, though I have not been so fortunate
as to come across them in their pilgrimage.
Equally interesting, however, is the
habit which the bird has in Devonshire of
occasionally going down to the rocks on the
seashore, as I have often noticed in the neighbourhood
of Teignmouth and Torquay. What
manner of food the redbreast may find in
such surroundings is a mystery, but there it
certainly spends some of its time, bobbing at
the edge of the rock pools in much the same
fashion as the dipper on inland waters.</p>
<p>Young robins are turned adrift at an early
age to look after themselves, a result of the
parent bird always rearing two families in the
year, and in many cases even three, so that
they have not too much time to devote to
the upbringing of each. Another consequence
of this prolific habit is that the robin has to
make its nest earlier than most of our wild
birds, and its nest has, in fact, been found near
Torquay during the first week of January.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>It has long been the pardonable fancy of
Englishmen exiled to new homes under the
palms or pines, in the scorching tropical sun
or in the biting northern blast, to misname
all manner of conspicuous birds after well-remembered
kinds left at home in the woods
and fields of the old country. As might be
expected of a bird so characteristic of
English scenes, and so closely associated
with the festival that always brings nostalgia
to the emigrant, the robin has its share of
these namesakes, and several of them bear
little likeness to the original. In New South
Wales, I remember being shown a "robin"
which, though perhaps a little smaller, was
not unlike our own bird, but the "robin"
that was pointed out to me in the States,
from Maine to Carolina, was as big as a thrush.
Yet it had the red breast, by which, particularly
conspicuous against a background
of snow, this popular little bird is always
recognisable, the male as well as the female.
Indeed, to all outward appearance the sexes
are absolutely alike, a striking contrast to
the cock and hen pheasant, the first bird
dealt with in these notes, as this is the last.</p>
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