Page:Ornithological biography, or an account of the habits of the birds of the United States of America, vol 2.djvu/123

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BLUE BIRD.
87

even, of twelve broad, rounded feathers. Short bristle-pointed feathers at the base of the mandible.

Bill and feet black, the soles yellow, iris yellowish-brown. The general colour of the upper parts is bright azure-blue, that of the lower yellowish-brown, the belly white. Shafts of the quills and tail feathers dusky.

Length 7 inches, extent of wing 10; bill along the ridge 12, along the edge 34; tarsus 812.

Adult Female. Plate CXIII. Fig. 2.

The female has the upper part of a tint approaching to leaden, the foreneck and sides yellowish-brown, but duller than in the male, the belly white. Length 612 inches.

Young Bird. Plate CXIII. Fig. 3.

When fully fledged, the young have the upper part of the head, the back of the neck, and a portion of the back broccoli-brown; the rest of the upper part much as in the Female. The lower parts are light grey, the feathers of the breast and sides margined with brown.




The Great Mullein.

Verbascum Thapsus, Wild. Sp. PL vol. i. p. 1001. Pursh, Flor. Amer. vol. i. p. 142. Smilh, Engl. Flor. vol. i. p. 512.—Pentandria Monogynia, Linn. Solaneæ, Juss.

This plant, which is well knovra in Europe, is equally so in America; but whether it has been accidentally or otherwise introduced into the latter country, I cannot say. At present there is hardly an old field or abandoned piece of ground on the borders of the roads that is not overoTown with it. In the Middle and Southern Districts, it frequently attains a height of five or six feet. The flowers are used in infusion for catarrhs, and a decoction of the leaves is employed in chronic rheumatism.