. British birds in their haunts. Birds -- Great Britain. c^ ~) /. THE GREENFINCH. chirp which may be easily imitated by human whistling; it resembles somewhat one of the call-notes of the Canary- bird or Brown Linnet, and, being full and sweet, harmo- nizes with the woodland chorus far better than the monotonous croak described above. Another of the notes is a double one, and closely resembles that of the " Pee-wit," hence it is called in some places " ; The Green- finch builds its nest, when not among evergreens, in some. Please note that these images are ext
. British birds in their haunts. Birds -- Great Britain. c^ ~) /. THE GREENFINCH. chirp which may be easily imitated by human whistling; it resembles somewhat one of the call-notes of the Canary- bird or Brown Linnet, and, being full and sweet, harmo- nizes with the woodland chorus far better than the monotonous croak described above. Another of the notes is a double one, and closely resembles that of the " Pee-wit," hence it is called in some places " ; The Green- finch builds its nest, when not among evergreens, in some. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Johns, C. A. (Charles Alexander), 1811-1874; Wolf; Wymper. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectbirdsgreatbritain