McGill Library
McLennan Library Building3459 rue McTavish
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 0C9
Merlin, female
Falco columbarius
Char. Collins Fect. 1737
Item
1 watercolour painting ; 56 x 39 cm + 1 leaf
Charles Collins was an Irish painter, known for his portraits of animals and still-lifes. He achieved success in England painting exotic birds, game, dogs and dead game still-lifes. He was the painter for Robert Furber’s ‘Twelve Months of Fruit’ (1732). In 1736 he published in collaboration with John Lee a set of 12 large engravings, coloured by hand, of British birds in landscape and garden settings, entitled Icones avium cum nominibus anglicis. He then came to the attention of Taylor White, who engaged him to paint birds from his and others’ collections until 1743. Collins died in 1744, when he was described as ‘Bird Painter to the Royal Society.’
Drawing of a female Merlin from a 18th century specimen [modern geographical distribution: North America, Europe, Asia, and Northern South America].
Manuscript note on front of drawing: Char. Collins Fect. 1737;
Manuscript note on back of drawing: The Merlin AEsalon W. 85
Scientific name: Falco columbarius
With manuscript text on accompanying leaf.
Transcription of manuscript note on accompanying leaf: Asalon
F. rostro caeruleo, iridibus fuscis,
Dorso et parte superiore caeruleo et
fer[r]ugineo variegato parte inferiore
albicante maculis nigris longitudi-
nalibus magnitudine merulam
vix superans. Will. Orn. p.85
The Merlin
Translation of manuscript note on accompanying leaf: Asalon
F. with a blue beak, tawny irises,
a spotted blue and reddish-brown back and
top part [of the body], and a white under part [of the body] with black elongated spots;
it is slightly bigger than
a blackbird. Will. Orn. p.85
The Merlin