...It is mainly a pastoral countrywith large areas of rich, low grass land, and rangesof high hills, where there are many rocky precipicessuch as the daw loves...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds and Man」
...It comesto this: the daw knows a stick when he sees one,but the only way of testing its usefulness to him isto pick it up in his beak, then to try to fly with it...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds and Man」
...It is not to be doubted that the daw was once abuilder in trees, like all his relations, with the exceptionof the cliff-breeding chough...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds and Man」
...The daw, whether tame or distrustful of man,is always interesting...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds and Man」
..." Even the ornithologists who are interested in birds as birds haven't a good word to say of the daw...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds in Town and Village」
...(The vulgar daw is of course devoid of any distinction at all, unless it be his grey pate and wicked little grey eyes...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds in Town and Village」
...For several hours of that day there was a steady coming and going of birds between the cliffs and the coops, every daw going back with a chick in his beak for his hungry young in the nest...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds in Town and Village」
... It has thus come about that of all the Corvidae the daw is now the favourite as a pet bird, and in the domestic condition he is accorded more liberty than is given to other species...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds in Town and Village」
... “See-saw, Margery Daw, Sold her bed, and lay upon straw!” said he...
Marcus Clarke 「For the Term of His Natural Life」
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