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1 The king-fisher, or Alcedo ispida of Linnæus. There is no truth whatever in this favourite story of the ancients.
2 In copying from Aristotle, he has put "collum,"by mistake, for "rostrum," the "beak."
3 This bird in reality builds no nest, but lays its eggs in holes on the water side. The objects taken for its nest are a zoophyte called halcyonium by Linnæus, as Cuvier informs us, and similar in shape to a nest.
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