"The wattle-bird sings in the leafy plantation."
1880. Mrs. Meredith, `Tasmanian Friends and Foes,' p. 119:
"The pretty, graceful wattle-birds are . . . much esteemed for the table, cooked as snipe and woodcocks are in England . . . Our pretty, elegant wattle-bird wears a pair of long pendant drops, shaded from the deepest amber to white, lovelier than any goldsmith's work. Its greyish plumage, too, is very beautiful; the feathers on the breast are long, pointed, and tinted with golden yellow."
1890. Tasma, `In her Earliest Youth,' p. 265:
"The droll double note of the wattle-bird."
1890. `Victorian Statutes-Game Act' (Third Schedule):
"Close season. All Honey-eaters (except Wattle-birds and
Leatherheads); from 1st day of August to loth day of December."
<hw>Wattle-gold</hw>, <i>n</i>. poetic name for the blossom of the <i>Wattle</i>.
1870. A. L. Gordon, `Bush Ballads, Dedn., p. 9:
"In the spring, when the wattle-gold trembles
`Twixt shadow and shine."