HYPSIPETES. 165 the ground, on one of the topmost branches of a tree, contained three hard-set eggs. This was below Eungbee, at an elevation of about 3000 feet. The nest was a compact, moderately deep cup, composed of very fine twigs and stems, and with a quantity of dead leaves incorporated in the structure, especially towards its lower surface; it had no lining, but the stems used towards the interior of the nest were somewhat finer than the rest. Exteriorly the nest had a diameter of about 4-5 inches, and a height of about 2-5; interiorly a diameter of about 2-5, and a depth of nearly 1-5." Mr. Hodgson, writing from Nepal, says :— "May 20tf7i, Jalia PowaJi.—Two nests on the skirts of the forest in medium-sized trees, placed on the fork of a branch. They are made, of moss and dry fern and dry elastic twig-tops, and lined with long elastic needles of Pinus lonyifolia. They are compact and rather deep, half pensile, that is to say, partly slung between the brandies of the fork to which they are attached by bands of vegetable fibres. Each contained four eggs, pinkish-white,'thickly spotted with dark sanguine." Another year he wrote:— "May 9zf7i, in tlie Valley.—A. mature female with nest and eggs. Nest saucer-shaped, the cavity 3'5 wide by 2-5 deep, made of slender twigs and grass-fibres, with no lining. Eggs three, pale pink, blotched all over with sanguine brown/' "Writing from Almorah, Mr. Brooks tells us that " the nest and eggs were found by Mr. Home on the 27th May near Bheem Tal." Colonel G-. E. L. Marshall also found a nest in the same place. He says :—" I have only myself found the nest once at Bheem Tal (4000 feet); it was situated in a thicket. The nest of this species is similar in shape but much more substantial than those of the Common Bulbul. The eggs are much larger and more elongated in shape, but the colouring is similar to those of the Bulbul, and in many cases the blotches have a tendency to form a zone near the thick end. The nest I found was taken on the 10th June and contained fresh eggs. " On the 30th May, 1875, I found a nest of this species at Nairn Tal on Ayarpata, over 7000 feet above the sea. I record the circumstance, as their breeding at so great an elevation is exceptional. The nest contained three fresh eggs ; it was made of leaves and moss, lined with bents of grass, between two branches but partially resting on a third, in a bush at the outskirts of a forest on a steep bank and about eight feet from the ground." From Mussoorie, Captain Hutton recorded the following very full and interesting note:— " They breed during April, May, and June, making a rather neat cup-shaped nest, which is usually placed in the bifurcation of a horizontal branch of some tall tree; the bottom of it is composed of thin dead leaves and dried grasses, and the sides of fine woody stalks of plants, such as those used by the "White-cheeked Bulbul, and they are well plastered over externally with spiders' webs ; the lining is sometimes of very fine tendrils, at other times of dry grasses, fibrous lichen, and thin shavings of the bark of