256 SYLVIIDJE. come to the nest and eggs, and when it did I shot it. This I also sent to Mr. Hume to identify. Some time after I heard from Mr. Hurae, who said that there mast be some mistake, as the birds sent belonged to two different species,viz. Sylvia affinis and Hypolcds rama, and were both, he believed, only cold-weather visitants. This year I again c went for' these birds and again sent specimens of birds and eggs to Mr. Hume, who informed nie that the birds now sent were H. rama, and that the eggs must belong to this species. Soon after this Mr. Brooks saw the eggs with Mr. Hume and iden- tified them as being those of H. rama and identical with eggs he saw at home collected by, I think, Mr. Seebohm, of this species in Siberia. Only fancy a bird breeding on theNarra of all places, especially in May, June, and July, in preference to Siberia! Locally they* are very numerous, as I collected upwards of 90 to 100 eggs in one field about eight acres in size. They build in stunted tamarisk bushes, or rather in bushes of this kind which originally were cut down to admit of cultivation being carried on, and which after- wards had again sprouted. These bushes are very dense, and in their centre is situated the nest, composed of sedge, with a lining of fine grass, mixed sometimes with a little soft grass-reed. The eggs are, as a rule, four in number, of a dull white ground- colour with brown spots, the large end having as a rule a ring round it of most delicate, fine, hair-like brown lines, something similar to the tracing to be seen on the eggs of Drymcsca inornata. The egg in size is also similar to those of that species." The eggs of this species vary from broad to moderately elongated ovals, but they are almost always somewhat pointed towards the small end; the shell is fine but as a rule glossless ; here and there, however, an egg exhibits a faint gloss. The ground-colour is whitish, never pure white, with an excessively faint greenish, greyish, creamy, or pinky tinge. The markings are very variable in amount and extent, but they are always black or nearly so and pale ink}7 grey; perhaps typically the markings consist of a zone of black hair-lines twisted and entangled together, in which irregular shaped spots and small blotches of the same colour appear to have been caught, which zone is underlaid and more or less surrounded by clouds, streaks, and spots of pale inky grey. This zone is typically about the large end, but in one or two eggs is near the middle of the egg and in one or two is about the small end. Outside this zone a few small specks and spots, and rarely one or two tiny blotches, of both black and grey are thinly scattered; occasionally, however, the hair-lines so characteristic of this egg are almost en- tirely wanting, there is no apparent zone, and the markings, spots, and specks are thinly and irregularly distributed about the entire surface ; here and there the whole of the dark markings on the egg are entirely confined to the zone, elsewhere only pale lilac specks are visible. Occasionally together with a well-defined zone numerous specks, spots, and a few hair-line scratches of black are intermingled with faint purplish-grey spots, and pretty thinly scattered every- where,