. The British bird book . HAWK. T MIIS is a much rarer bird than the Kestrel,and one of very different disposition, preyingchiefly upon smaller birds, which it generally seizes asthey are resting on branches, or sitting upon the may see it skimming along by the side of a hedge,darting through a gate-way, and then dashing across anopen field, at only a few feet from the ground. Itdoes not disdain an occasional rat or mouse, when othervictims are scarce, and in this way, to some smallextent, it it beneficial. But birds form by far theB 5 greater proportion of its diet, and as chickens


. The British bird book . HAWK. T MIIS is a much rarer bird than the Kestrel,and one of very different disposition, preyingchiefly upon smaller birds, which it generally seizes asthey are resting on branches, or sitting upon the may see it skimming along by the side of a hedge,darting through a gate-way, and then dashing across anopen field, at only a few feet from the ground. Itdoes not disdain an occasional rat or mouse, when othervictims are scarce, and in this way, to some smallextent, it it beneficial. But birds form by far theB 5 greater proportion of its diet, and as chickens,partridges, and young pheasants are destroyed by it in con-siderablenumbers,both thefarmer andthe game-keeper haveample justi-fication forthe warfarewhich theywage againstit. The color-ation of the Sparrow Hawk is so totally different from that of thekestrel, that only by a very ignorant observer can the onebird be mistaken for the other. There is a certain similarityin appearance, however, between the cuckoo and theSparrow Ha


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectbirds, bookyear1921