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Litters of young foxes are born about the end of April or the beginning of May. Their number varies between three and twelve. |
She was just as much pleased to see a stranger, and she distinguished strangers at a distance of fifty paces, when they were turning the corner of the house, and with loud cries would invite them to come up to her, an honor which she never accorded either to him or his brother, who usually fed her, probably because she knew they would do so anyway. |
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The deer really weeps, its eyes being provided with lachrymal glands. |
The peacock is now kept entirely, it would seem, for ornament for the ornament of garden terraces (among old-fashioned and trim-kept yew hedges he is specially in place) in his living state, and for various aesthetic uses to which his brilliant plumage and hundred-eyed tailfeathers are put when he is dead or moulting. But we seldom eat him now, though he used to figure with the boar's head, the swan and the baron of beef on those boards which were beloved by our forefathers, more valiant trenchermen than ourselves. Yet young pea-hen is uncommonly good eating, even now, at the end of the nineteenth century, and in the craze that some people have for new birds Argus pheasants, Reeve's pheasants, golden pheasants and what not to stock their coverts, it is a wonder that some one has not tried a sprinkling of peacocks. |