286 4-5 in diameter externally; internally the nest was 2-4 in diameter, and the cavity had a total height oŁ 3*9, of which 2 inches was below the lower edge of the entrance. According to my ex- perience four is the regular complement of eggs. I have repeatedly (three times this year) shot the female off the nest, and beyond question Jerdon is wrong about this bird's laying Indian-red eggs.'7 According to Mr. Hodgson's notes, this species breeds in groves and open forest in Sikhim and the central region of Nepal from April to June, building a large globular nest in clumps of grass, of dry grass, roots, and moss, lined with fine grass and moss-roots. The entrance, which is circular, is at one side ; the nest is egg- shaped, the longer diameter being perpendicular, and is placed at a height of about 6 inches from the ground. A nest taken on the 30th May measured 6-12 in height and 3*5 in diameter externally, and the circular aperture, which was just above the middle, was 1*75 in diameter. It contained four eggs, which are represented as ovals, a good deal pointed towards one end, measuring 0-69 by 0-55. The ground-colour is a pale green, and they are speckled and spotted with bright red, the markings being most numerous towards the large end, where they have a tendency to form a zone or cap. Dr. Jerdon says that " it makes its nest of fine grass and withered stalks, large, very loosely put together, globular, with a hole near the top, and lays three or four eggs of an entirely dull Indian-red colour." This undoubtedly is a mistake; the eggs he refers to are, I think, those of Neornis flavolivaeeus. He gave them to me, but was not certain of the species they belonged to. The eggs of the present species are of much the same shape as those of the preceding, and there is a certain similarity in the colour of both; but in these eggs the ground-colour instead of being pink or pinky white, is a pale, delicate, sometimes greyish, green. Then though there is the same kind of zone round the large end, it is a purple or purplish, instead of a brick-red, and it is manifestly made up of innumerable minute specks, and has not the cloudy confluent character of the zone in S. crinigera. Out- side the zone minute specks of the same purplish red are scattered, in some pretty thickly, in others sparsely, over the whole of the rest of the surface. As a body the eggs have a faint gloss, de- cidedly less, however, than those of JS. crmic/era, but some few are absolutely glossless. In length the eggs vary from. 0-63 to 0*79, and in breadth from 0-46 to 0-43; but the average of forty-five eggs is 0-68 by 0-5. 460. Suya khasiana, Grodw.-Aust. Austen's Hill-Warbler. Suya khasiana, Godio.-Aust., Hume) Cat. no. 549 bis. I found this bird high up in the eastern hills of Manipur, frequenting dense herbaceous undergrowth of balsams and the