Page:The Zoologist, 3rd series, vol 2 (1878).djvu/468

444 There was also, for many years, a Rookery in the trees in the churchyard of St. Dunstan's in the East, a short distance from the Tower; the Rooks for some years past deserted that spot, owing, it is believed, to the fire that occurred a few years ago at the old Custom House. But the present spring, 1827, they have begun again to build on those trees, which are not elm, but a species of plane. There was also, formerly, a Rookery on some large elm trees in the College Garden behind the Ecclesiastical Court in Doctors' Commons, a curious anecdote concerning which has been recorded."

Here follows a reference to the story given by Hone, and already quoted by Dr. Hamilton.

I may perhaps be also excused for quoting a paragraph from the ' Field Naturalist' for 1833 (vol. i., pp. 88, 89), wherein is con- tained the following extract from a child's book:*—

Finally, while on the subject of Rooks, I may be allowed to say that since ihe publication of my history of the species in the revised edition of Yarrell's ' British Birds,' I have been favoured by Lady Stuart-Menteth with a copy of the pamphlet ' Farmers versus Rooks,' mentioned by Yarrell, which, notwithstanding search made in many quarters, I had been unable to see. It is in the form of a report of a trial "supposed to have taken place in Ayrshire, before a committee of gentlemen, appointed by the Agricultural Society of that county, to consider the supposed damage done by Rooks to their tenantry," aud was printed at Ayr in 1838. There is now no novelty in the statements adduced on either side, what- ever there may have been then ; but the author, Mr. (subsequently Sir James) Stuart Menteath, skilfully marshalled a long array of witnesses on behalf of his clients, though the jury returned a verdict of guilty.

'Sketches of Birds,' &c. By S. Roper. 12mo. Harvey & Dartcn, London. 1832.