[Citizen Bird by Mabel Osgood Wright and Elliott Coues]@TWC D-Link bookCitizen Bird CHAPTER XXXI 6/8
His nest is usually built on the ground, but sometimes in a tree.
He goes fishing and clamming for a living. The Common Tern or Sea Swallow Length thirteen to sixteen inches, according to the length of the tail, which is deeply forked with slender outside feathers, like a Barn Swallow's. Plumage pure white, with a black cap on the head, a pearl-blue mantle, and silver-black shades on the long wing-feathers, which look as if they had hoar frost on them. Bill coral-red with a black tip, slender and very sharp, without any hook at the end.
Feet coral-red, very small and weak, the front toes webbed like a Gull's. Young ones are patched with various colors before they grow their pearly, snowy, and jet-black feathers. A Citizen of North America, chiefly its eastern portions, who travels far north in spring and far south in fall.
He nests in large colonies on the sand or shingle of beaches, and cries very sadly when House People come to steal the eggs or kill the young ones.
He belongs to the guild of Sea Sweepers, and eats little fishes. The Loon or Great Northern Diver Length two and a half to three feet, with a long neck like a Goose's, and a stout straight black bill, very sharp-pointed. Plumage glossy black above, with a necklace of white streaks and many square white spots on the back; under parts white from the root of the neck backwards, but the sides of the breast streaky. Young ones are speckled gray and white, without any glossy black, and the bill is not black. A Citizen of North America, who nests in the far North and migrates into the United States for the winter. A famous Sea Sweeper, who can catch fish by chasing them under water.
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