Webster 1913 notes the phrase pelican in her piety, but does not fully convey the strangeness of the heraldic pelican. In heraldry, a pelican is basically an eagle. Yup. It's got a beak like an eagle, the head of an eagle, and it's got an eagle's colours if you depict it proper, i.e. in its "natural" colours.

A pelican is always plucking at its breast with its beak to draw blood. This is called vulning itself (= wounding). Even when you can't see its breast, when the object depicted is just a pelican's head, its head is drawn back to vuln itself.

A pelican in her piety is a pelican vulning herself while sitting in a nest with her brood of baby birds drinking the blood she's letting flow for them.

In modern depictions the pelican may be more recognizably a pelican, but is still always in its peculiar attitudes.