Last Updated:2025/12/20
Sentence
But
what
distinguishes
the
rook
from
the
crow
is
the
bill;
the
nostrils,
chin,
and
sides
of
that
and
the
mouth
being
in
old
birds
white
and
bared
of
feathers,
by
often
thrusting
the
bill
into
the
ground
in
search
of
the
erucæ
of
the
Dor-beetle*;
the
rook
then,
instead
of
being
proscribed,
should
be
treated
as
the
farmer's
friend;
as
it
clears
his
ground
from
caterpillars,
that
do
incredible
damage
by
eating
the
roots
of
the
corn.
Quizzes for review
But what distinguishes the rook from the crow is the bill; the nostrils, chin, and sides of that and the mouth being in old birds white and bared of feathers, by often thrusting the bill into the ground in search of the erucæ of the Dor-beetle*; the rook then, instead of being proscribed, should be treated as the farmer's friend; as it clears his ground from caterpillars, that do incredible damage by eating the roots of the corn.
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