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NATURAL’  HISTORY 

OF 

BIRDS, 


Moft  of  which  have  not  been  figured  or  defcribed,  and 
others  very  little  known,  from  obfcure  or  too  brief 
Defcriptions  without  Figures,  or  from  Figures  very  ill 
defigned : 

CONTAINING 

The  Figures  of  Sixty-One  Birds  and  Two  Quadru  pedes,  engrav’d 
on  Fifty-Three  Copper  Plates,  afrer  curious  Original  Drawings  from 
Life,  and  exadly  Colour’d.  With  full  and  accurate  Defcriptions. 

To  which  is  added, 

An  APPENDIX,  by  Way  of  Illustration^ 


par 

T 

11. 

By  George 

E  D 

WARDS. 

:  LONDON: 

Printed  for  the  Author,  at  the  College  of  Phyfcians  in  Warwick- Lane» 


M.  DCC.  XLVn. 

114  7 


T  O 


Sir  HANS  SLOANE,  Bar'. 

Phyfician  in  Ordinary  to  his  M  a  j  e  s  t  y,, 


Late  President  of  the  Royal  College  of  Physicians^^ 
London,  and  of  the  Royal  Society. 


Honoured  S I 

U  F  F  E  R  me  to  caft  this  weak  Eflay  (towards 
Natural  Knowledge)  into  your  boundlefs  Trea- 
fury  of  Nature,  that  it  may  be  fupported  b)r 
your  Charitable  Protedlion,  and  skreen’d  under 
your  Illuftrious  Name  from  the  Malice  of  Detraftors.  If 
there  be  any  Thing  in  it  worthy  your  Notice,  it  is  prin¬ 
cipally  owing  to  your  Generofity,  in  giving  me  all  poffible 
Encouragement  in  the  Art  of  Defigning  after  Nature,  in 
which  Employment  you  have  (  without  fparing  your 
Purfe)  continued  me  for  many  Years,  to  my  great  Im¬ 
provement  in  that  Art:  Yet,  Sir,  your  indulgent  Kind- 
nefs,  in  giving  me  a  full  Liberty  at  all  Times,  for  thefe 
many  Years  paft,  to  confult  and  examine  that  ineftimable 
Treafure  of  Nature  and  Arts,  collected  by  the  worthy  In- 
duftry  and  Labour  of  a  great  Part  of  your  Life,  engages; 
my  Gratitude  more  than  any  mercenary  Confiderations. 

I  have  often  refledfed  on  my  own  good  Fortune^, 
when  I  have  confidered  that  the  Benefit  which  I  enjoy  has. 

for- 


IV 


dedication. 

for  many  Years  been  an  improving  and  pleafant  Enter=^ 
tainmentj  ■  not  only  to  the  greateft  of  our  Nobility,  but 
even  to  the  Royal  Family  of  thefe  Kingdoms,  as  well  as 
to  all  Foreigners  of  Diftin£Hon  who  have  vifited  this 
Kingdom,  of  which  Number  fome  are  Sovereign  Princes, 
and  Princes  of  Sovereign  Houfes  :  In  the  Front  of  the 
latter  may  be  placed  his  preftnt  Imperial  Majefty, 
v/hofe  great  Tafte  for  Natural  Knowledge,  and  other 
Sciences,  led  him  feveral  Times  to  indulge  his  Cu» 
riofity  in  viewing  fuch  valuable  Rarities  as  are  no  where 
to  be  met  with  but  in  your  Compleat  Mufeuniy  and  at 
the  fame  Time  honoured  their  worthy.. Pofleflbr  with  his 
Vifits,  during  the  fhort  Stay  he  made  in  London. 

Yet,  Sir,  the  foremention ’d  Obligations  are  not  the 
greateft  that  your  Benevolence  has  beftowed  on  me  :  It 
would  be  high  Ingratitude,  ftiould  I  forget  the  Pains  you 
have  taken  to  influence  the  Gentlemen  of  the  College  of 
Phyfcians  in  Favour  of  me,  in  order  to  place  me  in  the 
Office  I  now  bear  under  that  Honourable  Society  ,  fince 
it  has  raifed  me,  I  believe,  as  many  Patrons  as  there  are 
Gentlemen  of  that  Learned  Body  ;  and,  by  adding  fome- 
thing  to  a  fmall  Patrimony,  you  have  rendered  my  Con¬ 
dition  both  eafy  and  happy  5  for  which  Benefits  I  can  only 
offer  up  my  Prayers  for  the  Repofe  of  your  Body,  and 
your  Peace  and  Serenity  of  Miiid,  fo  long  as  it  fliall 
pleafe  God  to  continue  your  valuable  Life. 

/  am.,  H  o  N  o  u  R  E  D  S  I  R, 

Tour  fnofl  Humble 

'  and  moft  obliged  Servant^ 

GEORGE  EDWARDS. 


i, 


I', 


I 


i 


{  S3  ) 


‘The  A  s  H-C  OLouRED  Buzzard. 

I  .Have  given  this  Bird  the  above  Name,  becaufe  it  comes  pretty  near  the  Bird  we  call 
a  Buzzardy  or  Pottocky  in  its  Shape,  Magnitude,  and  partly  in  its  Colour,  thp’ 
it  differs  in  many  Refpedts,  which  fhews  it  to  be  fpecifically  different  from  our’s  in  En- 
glandy  which  fee  defcribed  in  Willoughbf^  Ornithology,  p.  70.  Pab.  6,  It  feemed  to  me 
of  the  Bignefs  of  a  middle-fized  Hen  or  Cock  ;  its  Shape  and  due  Proportions  I  have, 
as  well  as  I  could,  expreffed  in  the  Figure. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  blueifh  Lead-Colour,  cover’d  with  a  Skin  of  the  fame  Colour,  from 
the  Noftrils  to  the  Point  an  Inch  and  a  Qi^arter,  from  the  Angles  of  the  Mouth  to  the 
Point  of  the  Bill  two  Inches :  The  Head,  and  Fore-part  of  the  Neck,.,  are  cover’d  with 
Feathers,  having  dark  brown  Spots  in  the  Middle,  the  reft  of  the  Feathers  being 
white,  which  make  a  pretty  Appearance  of  White  fpotted  with  dark  Brown  j  from  the 
Angles  of  the  Mouth  is  drawn  on  each  Side  under  the  Eyes  a  dusky  Line  j  the  dark 
Spots  on  the  Breaft  are  larger  than  thofe  on  the  Head  j  the  Sides  and  Belly  are  co¬ 
vered  with  dark  brown  Feathers,  fpotted  with  round  or  oval  Spots  of  White ;  the 
Thighs  are  covered  with  foft,  loofe,  white  Feathers,  with  long  irregular  Dafhes  of 
dark  Brown  down  their  Shafts  j  the  covert  Feathers  on  the  under  Side  of  the  Tail  are 
barr’d  tranfverfly  with  Black  and  White  ;  the  whole  upper  Side,  Neck,  Back,  Wings, 
and  Tail,  are  covered  with  brownifh  afh-coloured  Feathers,  darker  in  their  middle 
Parts,  their  Edges  becoming  gradually  lighter,  which  is  moft  manifeft  in  the  fmaller 
covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings,  their  very  Edges  being  almoft  white.  The  outer  Webb 
of  the  firft  Quill  is  fpotted  with  a  light  Colour  ;  the  inner  Webb  on  the  under  Side  is 
Afh-colour,  indented  with  White  very  diftindtly,  which  Indenture  becomes  more  and 
more  confufed  and  broken  till  the  twelfth  Qmll,  where  it  wholly  difappears,  the  reft 
of  the  Quilfs  within  being  Afli-colour  :  The  covert  Feathers,  within-fide  of  the  Wings, 
are  of  a  dark,  dirty  Brown,  fprinkled  with  round  Spots  of  White:  The  upper  Side  of 
the  Tail  is  barr’d  a-crofs  with  narrow  Bars  of  Clay-Colour  ;  as  are  the  Feathers  that  co¬ 
ver  the  upper  Side  of  the  Tail :  The  under  Side  of  the  Tail  is  Afh-colour  barr’d  a-crofs 
with  White  :  The  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  blueifh  Afh-colour  ;  the  Claws  black  ;  the 
fore  Part  of  the  Legs  are  cover’d  half  Way  to  the  Feet  with  dusky  Feathers. 

This  Bird  was  brought  from  Hudfon's  Bay  by  Mr.  Alexander  Eighty  who  gave  it 
me ;  it  was  a  fluffed  Skin  well  preferved :  He  told  me  its  principal  Prey  was  the  Lago- 
pus  avisy  known  in  thofe  Parts  by  the  Name  of  the  white  Partridge^  which  I  have 
placed  with  him  by  way  of  Decoration ;  but  as  I  defign  a  Plate  in  particular  of  the 
white  Partridgey  I  fliall  fay  nothing  of  him  here  farther,  than  to  let  the  Reader  knov/, 
that  he  is  in  this  Plate  figur’d  in  his  full  Winter’s  Drefs,  being  wholly  white,  except 
fome  black  Feathers  in  his  Tail.  The  Figure  that  follows,  Pag.  72.  will  reprefent 
him  in  the  Spring,  when  he  is  changing  from  White  to  Brown,  orRedifh. 

B 


(  54  ) 


T^he  Crested  Red,  or  Russit  Butcher-Bird. 

This  Bird  is  figur’d  of  its  natural  Bignefs,  it  being  of  the  Size  and 
Shape,  and  fomething  of  the  Colour  of  the  Hen  Butcher-Eirdy 
defcribed  by  Willoughhyy  p.  89.  The  Bill  is  a  little  like  a  Hawk'^  but 
longer,  being  a  little  hooked,  having  Angles  on  each  Side  near  the  Point 
of  the  upper  Mandible,  of  a  Flefh-colour  at  the  Bafis,  gradually  growing 
black  toward  the  Point ;  behind  each  Eye  it  hath  a  black  Spot  in  form  of  a 
half  Moon;  round  the  Bafis  of  the  upper  Mandible  of  the  Bill  it  hath  black 
Bridles  flicking  out  like  Smellers ;  the  Creft  or  Crown  of  the  Head  is  of  a 
Reddilh-Colour,  appearing  in  the  deadBirdas  reprefented  in  the  Print;  the 
upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back,  Rump,  and  upper  Side  of  the  Tail  are  red, 
or  ruffit,  not  fo  bright  as  the  Creft ;  the  Sides  of  the  Head  round  the  Eyes, 
Throat,  Bread,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  Coverts  under  the  Tail,  are  of  a  dirty, 
pale  Orange- colour,  with  tranfverfe  dusky  Lines;  the  Wings  are  brown; 
the  greater  Feathers  fomething  darker  than  the  Coverts,  all  edged  with  a 
lighter  Brown;  the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws  are  black ;  the  under  Side  of  the 
Tail  is  of  a  Clay-colour;  the  middle  Feathers  longed ;  the  fide  Feathers 
growing  gradually  diorter,  as  in  Magpyes,  Becaufe  this  Bird  pretty  much 
refembles  the  Hen  Butcher-Bird  mentioned  above,  I  thought  proper  to 
fhevv  wherein  they  differ ;  this  has  fomething  of  a  Creft,  that  no  Appear¬ 
ance  of  one ;  this  hath  a  large  black  Spot  behind  the  Eye,  that  hath  none; 
this  hath  the  whole  under  Side  of  areddifh  Yellow,  with  tranfverfe  Lines; 
that  hath  the  under  Side  of  a  dirty  White,  with  femi-lunar  Spots ;  this  hath 
the  Back  of  a  very  red  Brown,  without  any  Marks ;  that  of  a  cinerious 
Brown,  barred  a-crofs  with  lighter  and  darker  Colours ;  the  Bill,  Wings, 
and  Feet  in  both  are  very  nearly  the  fame.  This  Bird  was  fent  from 
Bengaly  to  Mr.  Dandridge  in  Moorfieldsy  London.  It  is  called  in  its 
native  Country,  Charah.  This  Genus  of  Birds  is  called  in  France  by  the 
general  Name  of  Pie  grieche.  See  a  Book  of  very  neat  Prints  of  Birds, 
drawn  and  publiflied  by  N.  Robert y  one  of  the  Cabinet  Painters  to  Lewis 
the  14th  of  France^,  Tab.  4.  where  feveral  Species  of  them  are  figured 
very  exadllyo. 


53 


(  ss  ) 


The  kaft  Butcher-Bird. 

This  Bird  hath  already  been  6gured  and  fuperficially  defcribed  by  Albin%  but,  on' examine 
ing  his  Figure  and  Defcription,  I  find  fo  much  Inaccuracy  in  both,  that  I  have  thought 
it  convenient  (it  being  a  Bird  little  known  in  England)  to  give  it  a  Figure  and  more  perfed  Defcrip- 
tion ;  To  which  I  have  added  its  Hen,  which  I  believe  was  never  before  figured  j  it  is  called  by 
Albin  the  Beardmanica^  or  Bearded  Tit-moufe^  but  it  agreeing  with  the  Butcher-Bird  in  moft  of  its 
Charafterifticks,  I  conclude  it  to  be  a  Species  of  that  Genus. 

Thefe  Birds  are  here  reprefeiited  of  their  natural  Bignefs  5  the  lower  Figure  in  the  Plate  is  the 
Cock,  he  hath  the  Bill  fomething  arched,  as  have  the  others  of  this  Kind,  of  a  fine  lightOrange- 
Colour.  I  could  perceive  no  Angle  in  the  Bill.  The  Circle  round  the  Eye  is  of  a  brighc 
Orange-Colour :  From  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill  is  a  broad  Bar  of  Black,  which  encompaflfes  the  Eye^ 
and  tends  downwards  beneath  the  Eye,  where  it  terminates  in  a  Point,  as  exprefied-  in  the  Figure  :: 
The  Throat  and  Sides  of  the  Head  are  white,  which  Whitenefs  encompaflTes  the  above-mention*d 
black  Spot ;  the  Crown  of  the  Head  is  of  a  blueifh  Afh-colour  ;  the  Breaft  is  faintly  tindured  with 
a  Rofe  or  Bloflbm  Colour  5  the  Belly  is  firft  whitifh,  the  Thighs  and  towards  the  Vent  being 
darker  ;  the  Sides  under  the  Wings  are  clouded  with  Orange-colour ;  the  covert  Feathers  under 
the  Tail  are  black  •,  the  upper  Side,  Neck,  Back,  and  Tail  are  of  a  red  Brown,  inclining  tO' 
Orange-colour;  the  greater  Quills  of  the  Wings  are  black,  edged  with  White ;  the  inner  next  the 
Back  are  black,  edged  with  Orange-colour ;  the  two  innermoft,  fave  one,  have  their  inner  Webs 
white ;  the  leaft  and  Innermoft  Quill  Is  wholly  white  ;  the  firft  Row  of  the  upper  covert  FeatherSi 
of  the  Wings  anfwer  exadly  in  Colour  to  the  Quills  they  cover ;  though  in  the  Orange-colour 
they  are  tipp’d  deeper  and  brighter  than  the  Quills,  which  makes  a  Bar  of  Orange  a-crofs  the 
Wings  i  the  lefler  Coverts  are  black ;  the  Ridge  of  the  Wing  is  white  ;  the  covert  Feathers  within- 
fide  of  the  Wings  are  of  a  yellowifli  White;  there  are  intermixed  between  the  Back  and  the 
upper  Coverts  of  the  Wing  a  few  light  or  whitifh  Feathers;  the  Tail  confifts  of  twelve  Feathers,, 
longeft  in  the  Middle,  fhortening  gradually  towards  the  Sides,  to  left  than  half  the  Length  of  the 
Middle  Feathers ;  the  Tail  beneath  declines  from  Grange  to  an  Afh-colour ;  the  Legs  and  Feet 
are  black.  The  Hen  differs  from  the  Cock,  in  that  fhehath  no  black  Mark  about  her  Eyes  ;  the 
Coverts  under  her  Tail  are  light  Brown  ;  the  middle  Feathers  of  her  Tail  are  like  the  Cock’s  ;  the 
Side  Feathers  are  black,  with  pretty  deep  white  Tips ;  her  Head  on  the  Top  is  of  a  dirty  Brown,, 
which  in  the  Cock  is  blueifh  ;  her  Back  is  fprinkled  with  fome  dufky  Spots,  tending  length-ways 
the  Point  of  her  Bill  is  black  ;  flie  hath  not  the  rofe-coloured  Tinefture  on  her  Breaft ;  but  in  all. 
other  Refpedls  fhe  agrees  with  the  Cock  both  as  to  Shape  and  Colour. 

What  Mr.  Albin  fays  of  the  Care  the  Cock  takes  to  cover  the  Hen  with  his  Wing  when  at  Rooft,! 

I  have  heard  reported  by  others.  The  Right  Honourable  the  Counteft  of  Albemarle  brought  with- 
icovc\  Copenhagen  a  large  Cage  full  of  thefe  Birds,  when  fhe  returned  from  her  Attendance  ore 
one  of  the  Princeffes  of  Great  Britain^  who  was  efpoufed  by  the  Prince  Royal  of  Denmark^  in  the 
Year  174^.  I  was  favoured  with  a  Sight  of  them  by  the  Counteft,.  and  have  feen  fome  others  of  the 
fame  Kind,  both  Cocks  and  Hens,  fhot  among  the  Reeds  in  Marflies  near  though  they  are 

not  -well  enough  known  in  England  to  have  a  Name. 

Mr.  Albin  has  figured  and  defcribed  two  Birds,  Male  and  Female,  in  one  Plate,  vol,  3.  p.  5 
by  the  Name  of  Mountain-Tits^  which  he  had  from  Drawings  of  Sir  Thomas  Lowther-,  which  I  take 
to  be  no  other  than  his  Bearded  Tit-moufe^  or  Beardmanka ;  which  fee  in  his  Hiftory  of  Birds,. 
Vol.  i.  p.  46.  I  am  the  more  confirmed  in  this  Opinion,  fince  I  have  feen,  1  believe,  the  original; 
Dj-awing,  which  is  now  in  Richard  Mead ^  M.  D.  Phyfician  to  the  King, 


(  S6  ) 


F  OR  K-T  ail’d  Indian  Butcher-Bird. 

From  the  Stmdure  of  the  Bill,  the  Briftles  which  (hoot  from  its  Balls,  and 
the- Strength  of  its  Legs,  I  have  determined  to  give  it  the  above  Namej  though 
the  Tail  be  quite  contrary  to  the  Make  of  the  Butcher-Bird’ ^  j  this  having  its  longeft- 
Feathers  on  the  Sides,  and  the  fhorteft  in  the  Middle. 

This  Plate  prefents  you  with  the  Figure  of  the  Bird  drawn  as  near  to  the  Size  t)f 
Nature  as  I  could  do  it  by  the  Eye  ;  it  being  firmly  inclofed  in  Glafs,  I  could  not  well 
meafure  its  Parts :  It  hath  a  thick,  ftrong  Bill,  arched  fomething  like  a  Hawk'z  Bill, 
but  not  fo  much  over  hanging,  and  longer  in  Proportion  to  its  Thicknefsj  with  pretty 
large  Noftrils :  The  Bafis  of  the  upper  Mandible  hath  many  fliff  Hairs  round  it,  tending 
forward;  bothupperand  lower  Mandibles  are  of  adufkyBrown,  or  Black,  lighter  towards 
the  Bafis,  and  becoming  gradually  darker  towards  the  Point.  The  whole  Head,  Neck, 
Back,  and  covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings  are  of  a  bright  Ihining  Black,  refleding  Blue, 
Purple,  and  Green,  as  they  are  varioufly  turned  and  expofed  to  different  Lights.  The 
greater  Quills,  with  fome  of  the  firfl  Row  of  covert  Feathers  next  above  them,  are  of 
a  rufty  Black,  without  any  Luftre,  though  the  Quills  next  the  Body  are  of  the  Colour 
of  the  Head  and  Back :  The  Tail  Feathers  are  fhorter  in  the  Middle  than  on  the  Sides, 
which  makes  it  appear  notably  forked,  all  of  a  dull,  rufty  Black  ;  the  two  outermoft 
Feathers  being  tipped  with  a  dirty  White :  The  Breaft  is  of  a  dark  Afh-colour,  or 
blackifh  ;  The  whole  Belly,  Thighs,  and  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  are  White : 
The  Sides  and  the  Thighs  are  a  little  clouded  with  dufky  Spots :  The  Legs,  Feet,  and 
Claws  are  of  a  dufky,  blackifh  Colour. 

I  was  doubtful  whether  to  range  this  Bird  with  the  Butcher-Bird^  or  Magpye  Kind, 
for  it  feems  equally  of  kin  to  both,  and  I  think  the  Magpye  may  juftly  be  ranged  with 
the  Butcher-Birdy  feeing  they  agree  in  almoft  all  Refpe<fts ;  though  no  Englijhman  hath 
obferved  it,  yet  the  French^  by  calling  them  all  Pyes^  feem  to  have  better  difcovered  the 
Conformity  of  their  Natures.  I  take  this  Bird  to  be  a  non  defcript.  It  is  in  the  Collec¬ 
tion  of  Mr.  Dandridge,  whofe  obliging  Nature  has  given  me  frequent  Occafions  to 
mention  his  Name.  It  was  brought  from  Bengal^  and  is  called  in  that  Country  Lan¬ 
guage,  Fingah, 


He, 


;  . 


C' 

% 


(  57  )' 


The  Great  Spotted  Cuckow. 

HIS  Bird  (to  liken  it  in  Size  to  what  is  well  known  to  us)  is  of  the  Bignefs 
of  a  Magpyey  or  Jay^  and  is  the  largefl  of  four  Sorts  of  Cuckoos,  of  which 
I  have  Drawings  from  Nature  in  my  Colledtion  of  Birds,  and  in  its  Colouring  and  Spots 
is  the  moft  elegant  Bird  of  its  Genus  that  I  have  either  feen,  or  find  defcribed  by 
Authors.  See  two  Sorts  defcribed  and  figured  in  Sir  Hans  Shane's  Natural  Hiftory  of  Ja- 
maica.  Vol.  II.  Page  312J  313.  'Tab.  258.  and  one  in  Mr.  Catesbfs  Natural  Hiflory  of 
Carolina.  Vol.  I.  p.  13. 

It  hath  a  pretty  ffrong  black  Bill,  fomething  long  in  Proportion  to  its  Thicknefs,  and 
a  little  bowed  downward,  ending  in  a  Point;  the  lower  Mandible  hath  fomething  of  an 
Angle  underneath  ;  the  whole  Bill  is  of  a  black  Colour ;  from  the  Angles  of  the  Mouth 
on  each  Side  is  extended  backward  to  the  hinder  Part  of  the  Head  a  black  Line,  nar¬ 
rowed:  at  the  Extremes,  and  broader  in  the  middle  Part,  in  which  the  Eyes  are  placed  : 
The  Crown  of  the  Head  is  covered  with  foft  Feathers  of  a  blueifh  Afh-colour,  which  by 
their  Length  and  Loofenefs  appear  fomething  like  a  Crefl: :  The  whole  upper  Side, 
Neck,  Back,,  Wings,  and  Tail  are  cover’d  with  dark  brown  Feathers ;  the  greater 
Qmlls  and  Tail  being  the  darkeftand  approaching  to  Black  :  All  the  Wing  Feathers,  except 
the  greater  Quills,  are  tipp’d  with  White,  and  very  light  Afh-colour,  as  are  the  upper 
covert  Feathers  of  the  Tail;  the  two  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  wholly  dark;  all 
the  fide  Feathers,  as  they  gradually  fhorten  in  Length,  they  gradually  increafe  in  the 
Depth  of  their  white  Tips :  The  under  Side,  from  the  Sides  of  the  Head  and  Throat 
to  the  BreafI,  is  of  a  pretty  bright  Brown,  inclining  to  Orange ;  which  Colour  gra¬ 
dually  changes  in  the  Belly  and  Thighs  to  a  dirty,  yellowifh  Brown,  and  ends  in  the 
Coverts  beneath  the  Tail ;  the  infide  of  the  Wing  Feathers,  and  the  under  Side  of  the 
Tail  are  of  an  Afh-colour,  and  lighter  than  they  are  on  their  upper  Sides ;  the  Legs  are 
fhort  in  Proportion ;  the  Toes  ftand  two  forward  and  two  backward  ;  it  hath  pretty 
flrong  black  Claws  ;  and  both  Legs  and  Feet  are  covered  with  black  Scales. 

I  fuppofe  this  Bird  to  be  an  alternate  Inhabitant  of  the  Southern  Parts  of  Europe,  and 
the  Northern  Parts  of  Africa ;  fince  it  was  fliot  on  its  fuppofed  PafTage,  on  the  Rock  of 
Gibraltar,  in  Spain,  by  an  Englijh  Officer  there,  who  fent  it  to  his  Brother  Mr.  Mark 
Catesby,  of  London ;  who  obliged  me  with  it,  to  make  what  Ufe  of  it  I  thought 
proper,. 


(  58  ) 


The  Black  Indian  Cuckow. 

This  Bird  is  about  the  Size  of  our  Black-Bird^  or  Thrujlo.^  which 
is  fmaller  than  the  Cuckow  that  vifits  us  every  Summer  in  En¬ 
gland :  It  hath  its  Head,  I  think,  larger  in  Proportion  than  our  Cuckowy 
and  its  Bill  manifeftly  thicker,  tho’  not  quite  fo  long  as  our’s. 

The  Bill  is  thicker  and  ftronger  than  in  fome  of  this  Kind,  of  a  bright 
Orange  Colour;  the  Sides,  or  Edges  of  the  upper  Mandible,  where  they 
fall  over  the  nether,  do  not  run  in  a  ftrait  Line,  but  in  a  Wave,  as  it  is 
cxpreffed  in  the  Figure:  The  Head,  Body,  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  cover’d 
in  every  Part  with  deep  black  Feathers,  without  any  Mark  or  Spot  of 
other  Colours;  notwithftanding  which,  it  may  be  accounted  a  very  beau¬ 
tiful  Bird,  becaufe  its  Feathers  have  fuch  a  fhining  Luftre  on  them,  that 
they,  by  Turns,  being  expofed  to  difFerent  Lights,  refled  all  the  diffe¬ 
rent  Colours  in  the  Rainbow :  The  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are 
pretty  long ;  the  Side  Feathers  become  gradually  fhorter  ;  both  Tail  and 
Wings  are  pretty  long,  as  they  are  in  all  this  Tribe  of  Birds ;  the  Legs 
are  fliort,  but  thick  and  ftrong,  as  are  the  Feet  and  Claws,  all  of  a 
reddifh-brown  Colour,  the  Claws  being  darker  than  the  Toes.  As  it  is 
not  eafy  to  define  how  a  Thing,  that  fometimes  appears,  purely  black, 
fhould,  on  a  little  Turn,  take  fhining  Colours,  tho’  no  fuch  be 
placed  near  it  to  be  refledled  back ;  I  have  imagined,  that  thefe  Fea¬ 
thers  mufl:  have  in  their  Compofition  fome  tranfparent,  triangular  Fi¬ 
bres,  which  operate  on  the  Eye,  as  our  Glafs  Prifms  do,  I  think  it 
would  be  a  Matter  worthy  the  Pains  of  our  curious  microfcopical  Obfer- 
vators ;  it  might  be  tried  on  the  black  Feathers  of  a  MagpyCy  or  Rave?ty 
and  many  other  of  our  Birds,  who  have  fhining  black  Feathers. 

This  Bird  was  brought  from  Bengal,  where  it  is  called  in  the  Coun¬ 
try  Language,  Cukeel :  PofTibly  its  Cry  may  be  pretty  like  the  European 
Cuckow\y  and  the  Indians  may  name  it  from  its  Voice ;  feeing  the  Indian 
Name  nearly  agrees  with  that  the  Cuckow  bears  in  Europe.  This  was, 
with  many  other  curious  Birds,  in  the  Colledlion  of  Mr.  Dandridge  in 
Moorfieldsy  London ;  from  whence  my  Draught  was  taken, 

rioe 


p- 


(  59  ) 

7he  brown  and [potted  Y  d  i  a  N  C  u  c  K  o  w. 

This  Bird  is  of  the  Size  of  a  but  longer  bodied,^  ^  and  hath, 

in  Proportion  to  its  Bignefs,  a  large  Head,  and  a  very  long  Tail 
the  Bill  is  pretty  ftrong  and  thick  for  this  Tribe  of  Birds,  of  a  dirty  Yel¬ 
low,  inclining  to  Green  ;  the  Head,  Neck,  whole  Body,  Wings,  and  Tail, 
are  of  a  Brown-Colour,  fpotted  and  barred  in  every  Part  with  either  a 
lighter  Brown  or  White;  the  Head,  Wings  and  back  Part  are  darker  than 
the  under  Side,  fpotted  and  intermixed  with  a  lighter  Brown  ;  though  in 
the  leffer  Coverts  of  the  Wings  there  are  fome  white  Spots :  The  Spots  on 
the  Quills  fall  in  fuch  Manner  as  to  caufe  Bars  of  light  Brown  a-crols 
them ;  the  Tail  is  barred  a-crols  with  the  fame  Colour,  the  Lines  tend¬ 
ing  from  the  Shafts  of  the  Feathers  toward  their  Tips,  as  is  plainly  ex- 
prefs’d  in  the  Figure  ;  the  Bread:,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  covert  Feathers 
under  the  Tail,  have  a  great  Proportion  of  White,  a  little  mixed  in  the 
Belly,  Thighs,  and  under  the  Tail  with  Orange-colour ;  all  the  under 
Side  being  befet  fomething  confufedly,  with  femi-lunar  black  Spots  ;  the 
Legs  are  Ihort ;  both  Legs  and  Feet  of  a  yellowifh  Colour;  the  Toes  fland 
two  forward,  and  as  many  behind ;  the  Claws  are  dusky.  ‘  This  Bird  be¬ 
ing  more  like  the  common  Cuckow  than  the  others  here  defcribed,  it  may 
be  thought  the  fame  by  flight  Obfervers  of  Nature,  fo  it  will  be  proper 
to  oblerve  in  what  they  chiefly  difagree :  Firft,  it  is  lefs  by  a  full  third 
Part,  though,  by  reafon  of  the  fuperior  Length  of  the  Tail,  this  Bird  is  an 
Inch  or  more  longer  than  the  common  Cuckow that  is  white,  with  regu¬ 
lar  continued  tranfverfe  Lines,  on  the  under  Side,  from  the  Bread;  down¬ 
ward  ;  this  hath  the  Belly  and  under  Side  white,  mixed  with  Orange,  and 
fprinkled  with  black  Spots;  that  hath  bright  Gold-colour’d  Legs;  this 
hath  them  of  a  dirty  Yellow,  rather  inclining  to  Green  :  But  I  am  more 
certainly  convinced,  who  have  leen  and  compared  the  Birds  together,  than 
another  can  be  by  my  perfuading  him  to  be  of  my  Opinion  :  The  Tail 
Feathers  of  the  Common  are  tipp’d  with  White ;  but  in  this  there  is  no 
Appearance  of  it. 

This  Bird  was  brought  from  Bengal,  in  which  Country  Language  it  is 
called,  Boughtjallich  Mr.  Dandridge  obliged  me  with  a  Sight  of  this 
Bird  ;  from  which  my  Deflgn  was  taken. 


The  Great  Horned  Owl 


This  Bird  is  of  the  greater  Kind  of  Ow/f,  approaching  near  in  Magnitude  to  the 
greatefi:  Horn^  or  Eagle  Owl :  The  Bignefs  of  the  Head  in  this  feems  not  at  all 
inferior  to  that  of  a  Cat  y  the  Wing,  when  clofed,  meafures  from  the  Top  to  the  Ends 
of  the  Quills  full  fifteen  Inches. 

The  Bill  is  black  ;  the  upper  Mandible  hooked,  and  over  hanging  the  nether,  as  in 
Eagles  and  Hawks,  having  no  Angle  as  in  them,  but  plain  on  its  Edges ;  it  is  cover’d 
with  a  Skin,  in  which  are  placed  the  Noftrils,  and  that  Skin  hid  with  a  Brillly-kind  of 
grey  Feathers  that  grow  round  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill ;  the  Eyes  are  large,  having  Circles 
round  them  pretty  broad,  of  a  bright  fhining  Gold-colour  ;  the  Spaces  round  the  Eyes, 
which  one  may  call  the  Face,  is  of  a  light  Brown,  confufcdly  mixed  with  Orange-colour, 
gradually  becoming  dulky  where  it  borders  on  the  Eyes  j  over  the  Eyes  it  hath  white 
Stroaks  j  the  Feathers  that  compofe  the  Horns  begin  juft  above  the  Bill,  where  they  are 
intermixed  with  a  little  White,  but  as  they  extend  onwards  beyond  the  Head  they  be¬ 
come  of  a  red  Brown,  clouded  with  Dulky,  and  tipped  with  Black  :  The  Top  of  the 
Head,  Neck,  Back,  Wings,  and  upper  Side  of  the  Tail,  are  of  a  dark  brown  Colour, 
fpotted,  and  intermixed  with  feme  confufed  tranfverfe  fmall  Lines  of  Alh-colour,  and 
reddifh  ;  the  greater  Wing  Feathers  and  the  Tail  are  barred  a-crofs  with  dusky  Bars  of 
half  an  Inch  Breadth,  fome  a  little  more,  fome  lefs  j  the  Feathers  between  the  Back  and 
Wings  are  Orange-colour  tipp’d  with  White  j  a  little  below  the  Bill  the  Throat  is 
White  5  the  fore  Part  of  the  Neck  and  Breaft  are  bright  Brown,  inclining  to  Orange, 
’which  gradually  grows  fainter  on  the  Sides  j  this  brown  Part  is  fpotted  with  pretty  large 
dark  Spots,  and  intermixed  between  the  Spots  with  the  fame  dufky  Colour  ;  the  Middle 
of  the  Breaft,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  under  Side  of  the  Tail  are  White,  or  faint  Afh-colour, 
barred  tranfverfely  with  dujfky  Lines  pretty  regularly  5,  the  Infide  of  the  Wings  co¬ 
loured  and  variegated  in  the  fame  Manner  j  the  Legs  and  Toes  almoft  to  the  Ends  are 
covered  with  light  Afh-coloured  Feathers 3  the  Ends  of  the  Toes  and  Claws  of  a  dark 
Horn-colour. 

I  faw  this  Bird  alive  in  the  Park  of  the  Right  Honourable  the  Earl  of  Burlington,  at 
his  Houfe  at  Chifwick,  near  London,,  where  I  made  this  Defign.  It  was  brought  from 
Virginia. 

I  have  by  me  a  Bird  which  I  believe  to  be  of  the  fame  Species  with  this  j  I  received 
it  preferved  dry  from  Hudfon's~Bay,  in  North- America.  It  differs  from  the  above  de- 
ferib’d,  in  that  it  hath  not  Orange-colour’d  and  white  Feathers  between  the  Back  and 
Wings,  and  in  having  the  Infide  of  the  Wings,  Belly,  Thighs,  Legs,,  and  under  Side 
of  the  Tail  mixed  with  a  dull  Orange-colour,  but  little  Light  or  White  being  intermixed 
with  the  black  tranfverfe  Bars,  as  in  the  above  deferibed :  The  Magnitude  in  both  the  fame. 
I  have  given  this  Bird  a  Place  here,,  becaufe  its  Defeription  varies  fomething  from  the 
European  Birds  of  this  Kind  I  find  deferib’d  by  Authors.  See  Willoughby,  Page  99.. 
Tab.  12.  There  is  now  kept  alive,  Mourning-Bujh  hy  Alderfgate,  Lon¬ 
don,.  an  Owl  which  I  take  to  be  of  this  very  Species.,  ,  ^ 

The 


W- 


6o 


m- 


■f 


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! 


V,J 


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>. 


'y 


■  .  ...  /■■■  •’*'V 


(  6r  ) 


The  Great  White  Owl. 

HIS  Bird  comes  near  the  firft  Magnitude  of  this  Genu§,  and  is  the  moft  beauti-. 

J.  ful  of  all  the  Species,  on  account  of  its  exceeding  fnowy  Whitenefs :  Its  Head  is 
lefs  in  Proportion  than  in  other  O'w/s  j  the  Wing,  when  clofed,  is  lixtceu  Inches  from 
the  Shoulder  to  the  Tip  of  the  longeft  Quill,  which  may  give  one  a  Judgment  of  its 
Size  :  It  is  faid  to  be  a  diurnal  Bird  j  it  preys  on  Partridges,  and  continues  in 
Hudfon*s  Bay  all  the  Year. 

The  Bill  is  hooked  like  a  HawPs,  having  no  Angles  on  the  Sides,  is  all  black,  with 
wide  Noftrils,  the  Bill  almoft  covered  with  ftiff  Feathers  like  Hairs,  planted  round  its 
Balls,  and  reflected  forward :  The  Eyes  are  encompaded  with  bright  yellpw  Irides  j 
the  Head  is  fmaller  in  Proportion  than  is  common  to  this  kind,  of  a  pure  White  Co¬ 
lour,  as  is  the  whole  Body,  Wings  and  Tail ;  the  Top  of  the  Head  is  fpotted  with 
fmall  dirty-brown  Spots  j  the  upper  Part  of  the  Back  is  painted  with  tranfverfe. 
Lines  of  dusky  Brown,  as  are  the  Sides  under  the  Wings,  but  with  fmaller  and 
fainter  Lines ;  the  Quills  on  their  outer  Webs  are  fpotted  with  dusky,  and  fome 
few  little  duiky  Spots  on  the  covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings,  all  which  the  Figure 
exprelTes  :  The  covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings  are  purely  White  ;  the  low¬ 
er  Part  of  the  Back  is  fpotlefs  j  the  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  on  the  upper  Side 
has  a  few  Spots  on  each  Side  the  Shafts  of  the  Feathers ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  co¬ 
vered  with  white  Feathers  ;  the  Claws  are  long,  ftrong,  and  of  a  black  Colour,  very 
diarp  pointed.  Another  Bird  of  this  kind  came  to  my  Hands  together  with  this, 
which  differed  from  this  only  in  that  it  had  more  and  darker  Spots.  The  firft  of 
thefe  I  have  depofited  in  the  Miifceum  of  the  Royal  Society,  and  the  deeper  Spotted- one 
in  the  Colledion  of  Sir  Hans  Shane,  Bart> 

There  is  in  the  Hands  of  Mr.  Peter  Colinfon,  of  London,  F.  R.  S.  an  Oyl  Painting 

of  the  Size  of  Life,  done  in  Penfyhania  by  Order  of - Penn,  Efq.  from  one  of 

thefe  Birds  taken  alive,  and  kept  fome  Time,  which  has  given  me  a  Knowledge  of 
the  Colour  of  its  Eyes.  I  find  Drawings  of  this  Bird  alfo  in  the  Colleftion  of  Sir  Hans 
Shane,  in  which  the  Colour  of  the  Eyes  agree  with  thofe  of  Mr.  Colitifon'^  Piifture, 
which  feems  to  me  a  reafonable  Proof,  that  they  are  as  I  have  exprelfed  them.  I 
could  not  do  it  from  Life,  becaufe  the  Birds  were  lent  dried  from  Hudfon' s  Bay  to  me 
by  Mr.  Alexander  Light,  who  has  obliged  me  with  many  fuch  Favours.  The  Rea-^ 
fon  why  Mr.  Penn  caufed  this  Bird  to  be  drawn  was,  becaufe  of  its  great  Rarity, 
not  having  been  ever  obferved  before  in  Penfyhania  j  fo  that  I  fuppofe  it  inhabits  only 
the  moft  Northern  Parts  of  America,  I  cannot  find  that  any  Account  has  been  yet  given, 
in  Print  of  this  curious  Bird. 


rhe 


D 


(  62  ) 


The  Little  Hawk  Owl. 

This  Bird  is  rather  bigger  than  a  Sparrow-Hawk^  having  much  of  the  Air  of 
a  Hawk  from  the  Length  of  its  Wings  and  Tail';  but  the  Form  of  the  Head 
and  Feet  declare  it  to  be  near  of  Kin  to  the  Owl  Kind-  I  am  told  by  my  Friend, 
who  brought  two  of  their  ftuffed  Skins  to  me,  that  they  fly  and  prey  at  high  Noon, 
which  is  contrary  to  the  Nature  of  mod:  of  the  Owl  Kind. 

The  Bill  is  like  a  Hawk'&,  but  without  Angles  on  the  Sides,  of  a  bright,  reddifh 
Yellow  :  I  am  told,  that  the  Eyes  are  of  the  fame  Colour  ;  the  Spaces  round  the  Eyes 
are  White,  a  little  lhaded  with  Brown,  and  dafhed  with  fmall  longilh  dufky  Spots ; 
the  out  Sides  of  thefe  Spaces  towards  the  Ears  are  encompaffed  with  Black,  without 
that  again  is  a  little  White  :  The  Bill  is  covered  almoft  with  light-coloured  briflly  Fea¬ 
thers,  as  in  mod:  of  the  Owl  Kind  :  The  Top  of  the  Head  is  of  a  very  dark  Brown, 
fpotted  finely  with  regular  little  round  Spots  of  White  ;  Round  the  Neck,  and  down 
to  the  Middle  of  the  Back  is  dark  Brown,  the  Feathers  feeming  to  be  tipp’d  with 
White ;  the  Wings  are  of  a  Brown  Colour,  the  Qmlls  and  covert  Feathers  being  fine¬ 
ly  fpotted  on  their  outer  Webs  with  White ;  the  three  Qmlls  next  the  Body  are  not 
fpotted,  but  have  whitifh  Tips ;  the  Feathers  between  the  Back  and  Wing  are  painted 
with  broad  tranfverfe  Bars  of  Brown  and  White  ;  the  inner  Coverts  of  the  Wing  are 
white,  with  tranfverfe  Lines  of  Brown  ;  the  Quills  within  Side  are  dark  Afh-colour, 
with  white  Spots  on  both  Webs ;  the  prime  Quill  is  fpotlefs  within,  and  without  on 
its  outer  Web,  and  hath  hardly  any  of  that  reflefting  back  of  the  Points  of  the  outer 
Web,  as  is  obferved  in  Owls.  The  fame  may  be  obferved  of  the  great  white  Owl 
before  defcribed ;  the  Rump  and  covert  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  dark  Brown,  tranL 
verily  barr’d,  and  mixed  with  a  lighter  Brown ;  the  Tail  on  the  upper  Side  is  dark 
Brown,  and  alh-colour’d  beneath,  compofed  of  twelve  Feathers,  the  middlemoft 
longer  by  two  Inches  than  the  very  outermofi: ;  it  is  barr’d  a-crofs  with  feven  or  eight 
tranfverfe  narrow  Bars  of  light  Brown  :  The  Breaft,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  Coverts  un¬ 
der  the  Tail,  are  White,  barr’d  a-crofs  with  narrow  brown  Lines  in  a  regular  Man¬ 
ner:  The  Legs  and  Feet  are  wholly  cover’d  with  fine  foft  Feathers,  of  the  Colour 
of  the  Belly,  but  the  variegating  Lines  fmaller;  the  Claws  are  Iharp,  crooked,  and 
pointed  of  a  dark-brown  Colour.  There  was  another  of  this  Species  brought  with 
this,  which  was  a  little  bigger,  and  differ’d  fomething  in  Colour ;  it  had  all  the  fame 
Marks,  but  not  fo  ftrong  and  bright :  I  fuppofe  it  was  the  Female  of  this. 

Thefe  were  brought  from  Hudfon’s  Bay  by  my  Friend  Mr.  Lights  where  its  na¬ 
tive  Name  is  Coparacoch ;  it  preys  on  white  Partridges,  and  other  Birds ;  and  is,  by 
my  Friend’s  Report,  fo  bold  as  to  attend  near  a  Fowler  with  his  Gun,  and  will  fome- 
times  carry  off  a  Partridge  after  it  is  fhot,  before  the  Sportfman  can  reach  his  Game. 
There  hath  been  no  former  Account,  or  Figure,  given  of  this  Bird  that  I  know  of. 


The 


.m  V. 


IX'K'. 


(  63  ) 

The  Whip-Poor-Will,  or  lejfer  Goat-Sucker. 

This  Bird,  for  Shape,  Colour,  and  Agreement  in  moft  Particulars,  is  like  the  Bird 
called  in  England  the  Night-Hawky  or  Goat-Suckery  except  that  it  hath  fome  Marks 
different,  and  is  a  third  Part  lefs.  It  is  called  in  Virginiay  Whip-Poor-Willy  from  its  Cry, 
which  nearly  refembles  thofe  Words  j  the  Figure  reprefents  it  of  its  natural  Size. 

The  Bill  is  very  fmall,  of  a  Black  Colour,  yet  the  Mouth  is  very  wide,  the  Angles  or 
Corners  of  it  extending  under  and  beyond  the  Eyes ;  the  Sides  of  the  Head  round  the 
Eyes  are  of  a  light  Brown,  inclining  to  Afh-colour  j  on  the  Throat  it  hath  a  Half-Moon, 
like  Spots  of  White,  the  Corners  of  which  turn  up  towards  the  Ears ;  the  Top  of  the 
Head,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back,  upper  Coverts  of  the  Wings  and  Tail,  are  cover’d 
with  dark  brown  Feathers,  tranfverfly  barred,  and  fprinkled  with  a  lighter  Brown, 
and  fome  little  Mixture  of  Afh-colour,  mixed  and  blended  in  an  irregular  Manner  j  from 
the  Bill  there  pafTes  over  the  Eyes  down  the  Sides  of  the  Neck  fome  bright  Spots  cf 
Orange-colour;  and  on  the  upper  Coverts  of  the  Wing  are  fome  pretty  diflind; 
Spots  of  light  Brown  ;  the  Qmlls  are  Dusky,  or  near  Black ;  the  five  firft  have  a  white 
Spot  paffes  through  them,  which  pafTes  through  both  Webs  and  Shafts,  except  the  outer 
Web,  and  the  Shaft  of  the  outermoff  Quill ;  this  Spot  appears  within  and  without  Side 
of  the  Wings ;  the  covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings  are  White,  with  a  Cloud  of 
Orange  barred  a-crofs  with  tranfverfe  dusky  Lines ;  the  whole  under  Side,  and  covert 
Feathers  under  the  Tail  are  White,  with  fome  Mixture  of  faint  Orange,  regularly  crofTed 
with  Lines  of  dusky  Black ;  the  lower  Part  of  the  white  Spot  on  the  Throat  is  tindured 
with  Orange-colour  ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  very  fmall,  feather’d  a  little  below  the 
Knees,  of  a  Flefh-colour ;  the  outer  and  middle  Toes  are  joined  a  little  way  by  a  Mem¬ 
brane  ;  the  two  Middle  Claws  are  toothed  within -fide  ;  the  Tail  hath  on  each  Side  to¬ 
wards  the  End  a  white  Spot  in  the  Feathers. 

Mr.  Mark  Catesby  obliged  me  with  this  Bird;  it  was  brought  from  Virgmiay  and  there 
was  another  brought  with  it,  which  compared  in  all  its  Marks,  but  more  obfeure,  which 
I  fuppofe  to  be  the  Female. 

To  illuftrate  this  Hiflory,  I  fhall  add  a  Q^tation  from  a  Letter  Mr.  Catesby  received 
with  thefe  Birds  from  a  Gentleman  in  America.  “  They  come  to  Virginia  about  the 
“  Middle  of  Aprily  from  which  Time,  till  the  End  of  'Ju7iey  they  are  heard  every  Night, 
“  beginning  about  Dusk,  and  continuing  till  Break  of  Day  ;  but  it  is  chiefly  in  the  upper 
“  or  Weflern  Parts  that  they  are  fo  frequent:  I  never  heard  but  one  in  the  Maritime 
Parts ;  but  near  the  Mountains  in  the  Month  of  Mayy  within  a  few  Minutes  after  Sun 
fet,  they  begin,  and  make  fo  very  loud  and  fhrill  a  Noife  all  Night,  which  the  Ecchoes 
“  from  the  Mountains  increafe  to  fuch  a  Degree,  that  the  firfl;  Time  I  lodged  there  I 
could  hardly  deep  :  They  are  feldom  feen  in  the  Day-time.  The  Indians  imagine  thefe 
“  Birds  are  the  Souls  of  their  Anceftors  formerly  flaughtered  by  the  Englijloy  and  fay, 
“  that  they  never  appeared  in  their  Country  before  that  Slaughter.  Many  People  here 
look  on  them  as  Birds  of  Ill-omen.  I  have  been  informed  they  lay  two  Eggs  of  a  dark 
‘‘  Green,  fpotted  and  fcrolled  with  Black,  in  the  plain  beaten  Paths,  without  any  Sign 
“  of  a  Nefl,  upon  which  they  frt  very  clofe,  and  will  fuffer  a  near  Approach  before  they 
fly  off.” 

rhe 


{  64  ) 

The  Toucan,  or  Brasilian  Pye. 

HIS  Bird  is  of  the  Bignefs  of  a  common  tame  Pigeon^  fhaped  pretty  much 

)|  like  a  Magpye  in  the  Body,  but  its  Head  larger,  the  better  to  fuftain,  the  Great- 
nefs  of  its  Bill:  The  Tail  is  rather  fhort  than  long,  compofed  of  Feathers  of  equal 
Length. 

The  Bill,  from  the  Forehead,  or  the  Angles  of  the  Mouth,  to  the  Point,  is  fix 
Inches  long  j  its  Height,  or  Depth,  where  deepeft,  is  fomething  more  than  two  In¬ 
ches  ;  from  Side  to  Side,  near  the  Head,  one  Inch  thick  :  The  upper  Mandible  is  of  a 
pale  yellow  greenifii  Colour  j  the  Sides  near  the  toothed  Edges  have  each  a  long 
Cloud  of  Orange-Colour,  tranfverfly  barr’d  with  black,  or  dulky  Lines,  which  pafs 
thro’  the  Divifions  of  the  Bill  a  little  Way  into  the  Sides  of  the  lower  Mandible  j  the 
lower  Mandible  is  of  an  exceeding  fine  Blue  Colour,  faint  towards  the  Head,  fironger 
towards  the  Point  >  the  Point  itfelf,  of  both  upper  and  lower  Mandible,  for  above  an 
Inch  Depth,  is  of  a  fine  Scarlet  Colour  j  the  Bill  is  very  much  comprelTed  fide-ways, 
and  ends  in  a  perfedl  Edge  along  its  upper  Part  5  the  Edge  of  the  lower  Mandible  is 
fomething  lefs  ridged  j  the  Bill  is  bowed  towards  the  Point,  as  is  exprelTed,  and  has  a  large 
Cavity  above  the  Roof  of  the  Mouth  j  the  Noftrils  are  invifible,  being  fituated 
pretty  near  together  in  the  upper  Part  of  the  Bill,  juft  in  the  Line  which  pafies  between 
the  Bill  and  the  Forehead  :  The  Eyes  are  of  a  dark  Hazel-Colour,  encompafied  round 
with  a  bare  Skin  of  a  greenifti  Yellow  Colour,  having  Seams  or  Creafes  running  in  a 
broken  Manner  round  the  Eye,  and  reaching  to  the  Bill,  there  pafies  all  round  the  Bafis 
of  it  a  narrow  black  Line:  The  Top  of  the  Head,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back, 
Wings,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  Tail,  are  of  a  Black  Colour,  the  Wings  only  having  a 
fhining,  changeable  Luftre;  the  Sides  of  the  Head,  Throat,  and  Breaft,  are  White,  or 
rather  Cream-Colour ;  and  between  the  White  on  the  Breaft,  and  the  black  Belly,  there 
is  a  Crefcent  of  fine  Red,  whofe  Horns  point  upwards  on  the  Sides,  and  this  is  foftened 
both  above  and  beneath  into  the  Colours  it  joins  with :  The  Rump,  or  Coverts  on  the 
upper  Side  of  the  Tail,  are  White  ;  the  Feathers  beyond  the  Vent,  and  thofe  that  co¬ 
ver  the  under  Side  of  the  Tail,  are  of  a  pale  Red  j  the  Legs,  Feet  and  Claws,  are  of  a 
light  Blue,  or  Violet  Colour  J  it  perches  with  two  Toes  forward,  and  two  behind,  in 
each  Foot. 

This  Bird  I  met  with  by  good  Fortune  alive  at  Mr.  Concanen's^  the  King’s  Attor¬ 
ney-General  for  the  Ifland  of  Jamaicay  from  which  Place  he  brought  it  to  England',. 
it  came  from  fome  Part  of  the  Spanijh  Main  Land.  By  the  Defcriptions  and  Figures 
extant  of  thefe  Birds,  I  imagine  there  are  many  Species  of  them,  feeing  they  fo  much 
differ  :  I  have  alfo  feen  Variety  of  their  Bills  in  Colledions,  fome  longer  by  two  Inches 
than  this,  and  others  much  fhorter  ;  fome  otherwife  marked,  and  others  of  a  Ihining 
Black  Colour.  Since  none,  who  have  defcribed  this  Bird,  pretend  to  have  feen  it  a- 
live,  and  moft  of  the'  Accounts  we  have  are  Colledtions  and  Tranflations  from  foreign 
Hiftorians  and  Voyagers  5  and  I  having  had  an  Opportunity  to  draw  this  Bird,  whilft 
living,  and  in  Health,  as  well  as  examining  it  particularly  after  it  died,  I  hope  this 
Figure  and  Defcription,  having  nothing  borrowed  in  it,  will  give  at  leaft  to  my  Coun¬ 
trymen  a  more  perfedl  Idea  and  Knowledge  of  it  than  they  have  hitherto  had.  After 
this  Bird  was  dead,  the  Colours  in  the  Bill  were  wholly  loft  and  obfcur’d,  and  the  bare 
Space  round  the  Eye  turn’d  blacks  Phe 


( 


65  ) 

T’he  Grey-Headed  Green  Woodpecker. 

This  Bird  is  about  the  Bignefs  of  the  Green  Woodpecker  we  have  in  England^ 
which  is  fomething  lefs  than  a  Magpye. 

The  Bill  is  ftraightand  fharp  pointed,  fhaped  as  in  Woodpeckers^  of  a  dark  Afli- 
colour,  the  lower  Mandible  towards  its  Bafis  and  round  the  Angle  of  the  Mouth  being 
of  a  light  Orange-colour  5  the  Noftrils  are  cover’d  with  ftiff  black  Bridles,  which  point 
forward  over  them,  and  this  Black  reaches  back  from  the  Bill  to  the  Eyes  on  each  Side  j 
from  the  Bafis  of  the  lower  Mandible  on  each  Side  proceed  two  black  Lines  drawn 
downward  on  the  Sides  of  the  Throat;  the  Throat  between  thefe  Lines  is  whitifli  » 
the  Head,  Neck,  Bread,  Belly  and  Thighs  are  of  a  blueifh  Grey  or  Afh-colour,  more 
pure  in  the  Head  and  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  but  from  the  Throat  downward  the  whole 
under  Side  is  a  little  mixed  with  Green :  The  upper  Part  of  the  Back  is  of  a  fine  blue 
Green-colour,  which  on  the  Rump  becomes,  almod  Yellow  ;  the  covert  Feathers  of  the 
Wings,  and  the  Quills  next  the  Body,  are  of  a  yellowiih  Green  ;  the  inner  Webs  of  the 
innermod  Quills  a  little  barred  a-crofs  with  a  dulky  Colour;  the  greater  Quills,  with  Part 
of  the  'Coverts  incumbent  on  them,  are  of  a  dark  Brown-colour,  fpotted  with  light 
Yellow,  which  fall  in  Rows  on  their  Edges :  The  Tail  Feathers  feem  to  have  double 
Points,  becaufe  their  Webs  on  each  Side  extend  beyond  their  worn  and  broken  Shafts  .; 
they  are  of  a  dark  Brown-colour  with  tranfverfe  dufky  Lines,  their  Edges  being  greenidi, 
the  middle  Feathers  longed,  and  gradually  fhortening  toward  the  Sides;  the  covert 
Feathers  of  the  Tail,  both  above  and  beneath,  are  of  a  dirty  Green  ;  the  Legs,  Feet  and  ■ 
Claws  are  Black  ;  the  longed  Toe  is  equal  to  the  Length  of  the  Leg,  and  the  Toes  in 
each  Foot  difpofed  two  forward  and  two  backward,  as  is  common  to  this  GenuSo  , 

This  Bird  was  procured  by  EaylerWhite^  Efq;  It  came  from  Norway^  and  differs  from 
our  Green  Woodpecker^  in  that  it  wants  the  fine  Scarlet  Colour  on  the  Top  of  the  Head, 
and  in  the  Marks  that  proceed  from  the  Corners  of  the  Mouth  on  each  Side,  (in  lieu 
of  which  it  hath  only  four  or  five  almod  imperceptible  Dots  of  Red  on  the  Forehead 
near  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill)  and  in  being  Afh-colour’d  on  the  Neck,  and  under  Side, 
where  that  is  of  a  pale  yellow  Green.  In  other  Refpe<ds  they  nearly  agree.  Perhap 
this  Bird’s  being  of  a  Northern  Country  may  caufe  the  Difference  in  Colour,  more  than 
any  real  fpecifical  Difference  between  it  and  ours  in  England,  for  Northern  Climates  do 
not  produce  Birds  of  fuch  fine  Colours  as  Climates  nearer  the  Equinoctial ;  fince  it  is  ob- 
ferved  that  Bears,  Foxes,  Hares,  and  various  Birds,  are  Grey,  and  fometimes  White,  in 
very  Northern  Parts,  which  are  otherwife  coloured  farther  from  the  Poles :  So  that  I 
take  the  Greynefs  of  this  Bird’s  Head  and  under  Side  to  be  owing  only  to  its  Northern 
Habitation. 


E 


(  66  ) 


Black  White  Chinese  Cock  Pheasant^  with  its  Hen,. 

TH  E  Cock  is  confiderably  larger  than  our  common  Cock  Fheafant^  but  fhaped 
much  like  it. 

The  Bill  is  like  a  Cock  or  Hen’s^  of  a  Yellow  Colour,,  and  dusky  towards  the  Point ; 
the  Eyes  are  alfo  yellow,  encompaffed  with  a  very  broad  Space  of  a  fine  Scarlet,  bare 
of  Feathers,  but  thinly  fprinkled  with  Hairs,,  which  rife  in  the  upper  Part  on  each 
Side  in  the  Form  of  Horns,'  and  extend,  backward  in  a  Point  on  each  Side  of  the  Plead, 

»  and  on  the  Cheeks  hang  down  like  the  Gills  of  a  Cock  The  Top  of  the  Head  from 

the  Bill  backward  is  covered  with  long  black  Feathers,  having  a  Purple  Glofs,  which 
hang  dovs^n  its  Neck  behind 3.  the  upper  Part,  viz.  the  Sides  of  the  Head,  upper  Side 
of  the  Neck,  Back,  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  covered  with  white  Feathers,  each  having 
three  or  four  fine  black  Lines  running  one  within  an  other,  parallel  to  the  outer  Cir¬ 
cumference  of  the  Feathers,,  as  exprefied  in  the  Figure,  except  the  greater  Quill  Fea¬ 
thers,  and  the  outer  Feathers  of  the  Tail,  which  have  oblique  Bars  and  Dailies  of  Black, 
as  the  Figure  likewife  exprefieth;  the  two  upper  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  white  j  the 
under  Side,  from  the  Bill  to  the  Coverts  beneath  the  Tall,  is  Black,  with  a  Purple 
Glofs,  narrow  on.  the  Throat,  but  increafing  in  its  Weadth  to  the  Breaft  and  Belly  j  the. 
Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  fine  Scarlet  Colour,  and  it  hath  Spurs  like  the  common  Cock^, 
of  a  white  Colour. 

The  Hen  is  fomething  lefs  than  the  Cock,  her  Bill  of  a  yellowlfii  Brown,  as  are 
her  Eyes,  with  a  bare  red  Space  about  them,  as  in  the  Cock,  but  not  nigh  fo  broad  3, 
tPie  Crown,  of  the  Head  is  covered  with  dark-brown  Feathers,  hanging  a  little  down 
behindj  the.  Throat,  and  Sides  of  the  Head  beneath  the  red  Space,  is  whitith  ;  all  the 
Neck,.  Breaft,  Back,  Wings,  and  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail,  are  of  a  reddifh  Brown, 
except  the  greater  Quills,  which  incline  to  dufky,  and  thofe  next  the  Body  powdered, 
with  Black  j  the  Belly  and  Side  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  of  a  dirty  White,  tranfverfly, . 
but  fomething  confufedly  mixed  with  Duflcy  or  Black  j  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  red,  as 
in  the  Cock,  but  not  fo  bright,  nor  hath  it  any  Spurs. 

Thefe  curious  Birds  were  kept  many  Years  by  Sir  Hans  Shane  his  Ploufe  in^ 
London.,  where  they  hatched  young  ones,,  and  brought  them  to  Maturity.  The  Cock  of 
this  Bird  hath  been  figured  and  defcribed  by  Albin,  in  his  Hiftory  of  Birds,  FoL  IIL 
Pag.  35.  but  as  I  have  made  fome.  Corretftions  both  in  the  Figure  and  Defcription, 
and  have  added  to  it  the  Hen,  w'hich  is  there  wanting  j  I  hope  the  Curious  will  not 
think  my  Labour  loft.  Albin  hath  given  his  a  Tail  much  too-  Ihort,  and  hath  been, 
no  Way  precife  in  figuring  the.  red  Space  round  the.  Eye 3  nor.  hath  he  mentioned  or 
figured  the  curious  particular  Marks  on  the  white  Feathers  5  and  the  Spurs  he  hath; 
alfo  omitted.  ’Tis  probable  he  only  faw  this  Bird  in  a  Yard  walking,  and  took  his 
Sketch  from  it  there,  fo  could  not  be  fo  particular  as  I  had  Opportunity  to  be,  thefe 
.Birds  being  the  Property  of  my  good  Patron,  whofc  Houfe  I  frequented,  and  had  Op¬ 
portunity  often  to  repair  my  Draughts,  by  ftridlly  examining  them  in  their  mi- 
mute  Parts,  not  only  while  they  were  living,  ,  but  after  they  were  dead.. 


(  ^7  ) 

The  Peacock  Pheasant  from  China. 

H  I  S  Bird  is  larger  than  the  common  Pheafant,  and,  tho’  it  be  called  by  this' 

Name,  I  take  it  not  to  be  of  the  Pheafant  Kind,  for  the  Tail  is  compofed  of 
flat  Feathers,  not  pointed  at  their  Ends,  nor  bending  downward  towards  the  Point, 
nor  hollow  on  their  under  Sides,  by  the  Inclination  of  their  Web,  but  the  Feathers 
are  flat  and  roundifli  at  their  Tips,  and  in  walking  its  Tail  doth  not  bend  into  an  Arch, 
as  it  doth  in  a  Pheafanfs.  See  the  others  defcribed  in  this  Book.  Tho’  it  be  a  grave 
coloured  Bird,  yet  is  it  one  of  the  greateft  Beauties  in  Nature  j  one  may  compare  it  to 
Sable,  thick  fet  with  fhining  Jewels  of  various  Colours. 

Its  Bill  is  dulky,  the  upper  Mandible  being  red  from  the  Noflrils  to  the  Point ;  the 
Eyes  are  yellow;  it  hath  alfo  a  yellow  bare  S^pace  between  the  Bill  and  Eyes,  thinly 
let  with  black  Hairs ;  the  Cheeks,  and  a  little  Space  above  the  Eyes,  are  whidfli ;  tlie 
Feathers  on  the  Crown  of  the  Head  are  dark  Brown,  riling  up,  and  their  Tipsrefied:- 
ing  a  little  forward;  the  Neck  is  bright  Brown,  tranfverfly  barred  Vv^ith  dirty  dark 
Brown ;  the  upper  Part  of  the  Back,  and  all  the  Wing  Feathers,  except  the  greater 
Quills,  are  of  a  dark-brown  Colour,  finely  painted  on  the  Tip  of  each  Feather  with 
bright  Alining  round  Spots  of  Purple,  which  are  changeable  to  Blue,  Green,  and  a 
golden  Copper  Colour;  thefe  are  encompafied  with  Circles  of  Black,  and  each  Feather 
tipp’d  with  bright  yellowiAi  Brown  ;  the  Spaces  between  the  Spots  on  the  V/ing  and 
Back  are  powder’d  v/ith  fine  light  brown  Spots;  the  greater  Quills  are  wholly  of  a 
dark.  Brown  or  Black ;  the  Breaft,  Belly,  and  Thighs,  are  of  a  dark  Brown,  tranf¬ 
verfly  variegated  with  Black  ;  the  lower  Part  of  the  Back  and  Feathers  covering  the. 
Tail  are  Brown,  finely  powdered  with  a  brighter  Brown  ;  the  Tail  Feathers  are  of  a 
pretty  dark  Brown,  powder’d  alfo  finely  v/ith  a  lighter  Brown,  the  Feathers  being 
longefl  in  the  Middle,  and  fliortening  gradually  tov/ard  the  Sides :  Each  Feather  of 
the  Tail  hath  two  beautiful  Eyes  toward  their  Tips,  one  on  each  Side,  the  Shafts  of 
the  Feathers,  fo  that  they  fland  in  Pairs,  of  the  fame  changeable  beautiful  Colour 
with  thofe  on  the  Back  and  Wings,  encompafied  with  Black,  and  without  that  encom¬ 
pafied  again  with  obfcure  Orange  Colour :  Thefe  bright  Spots  hardly  appear  on  the 
under  Side  of  the  Tail,  which  is  of  a  dufky  Colour;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  like  thofe 
of  a  Plen^  of  a  dirty  Brov>?n  or  Black;  it  hath  two  Pair  of  Spurs,  the  firA  Spur  ftanding 
about  a  quarter  Part  up  the  Leg;  the  other,  which  is  the  larger,  about  the  Middle  of 
the  Leg ;  which  is  a  Thing  in  this  Bird  more  rare  and  remarkable  than  all  its  Beauties. 

This  Bird,  when  I  drew  it,  was  the  Property  of  iifip.vri?,  M.  D.  of  Londoi^  a- 

moA  obliging  Gentleman,  of  v/hom  I  have  received  many  Favours..  It  has  fince  been 
prefented  to  Lord  Orfordy  and  is  now  living  at  his  Houfe  in.  the  Exchequer. 

The  Flower  here  figured,  by  Way  of  Decoration,  is  called  the  Cbinefe  Rofe :  I  drew 
it  from  Nature ;  it  is  what  we  fee  moA  frequently  painted  in  Chinefe  Pictures ;  it  blows 
broader  than  a  Rofe,  and  is  of  a  red  Rofe  Colour,  with  the  Stems  in  the  Middle  of  a 
Yellow  or  Gold  Colour.  The  green  Leaves  were  Aiff,  firm,  and  fmooth,  like  thofe 
of  Ever-greens. 

This  beautiful  flowering  Tree  was  raifed  by  the  late  curious  and  noble  Lord  Petre^. 
in  his  Stoves  at  Phorndon-Hall  in  EJJ'ex, 

PIjc: 


(  68  ) 

"^6  Painted  Pheasant  from  China. 

H  I  S  Bird  is  rather  fmaller  than  our  Englifi  Pheafanty  fhaped  pretty  much  like 

it,  but  the  Tail  I  think  is  longer  in  Proportion,  the  middle  Feather  being  23 
Inches  long.  It  has  been  already  defcribed  by  Alhin  in  his  Hiftory  of  Birds,  Vol.  III. 
Pa.  34.  by  the  Name  of  the  Red  Pheafant-y  but  having  in  it  a  Mixture  of  all  the  gay 
and  gorgeous  Colours  imaginable,  I  thought  the  Name  I  have  given  it  more  proper  to 
it.  Mr.  AJhin's  Figure  of  this  Bird  being  far  wide  of  a  juft  and  natural  Defcription, 
I  ftiall  endeavour  to  mend  his  Faults  in  mine;  He  has  made  its  Bill  and  Head  much  too 
large  for  his  Proportion,  his  Wing  too  long,  and  his  Tail  hardly  half  long  enough,  and 
omitted  many  Particulars,  which  I  fhall  add  both  in  my  Figure  and  Defcription. 

Its  Bill  is  of  a  light  Yellow  Colour,  fomething  darker  towards  the  Point;  the  Eyes 
encircled  with  a  bright  Yellow;  the  Sides  of  the  Head  beneath  the  Eyes  of  a  Flefti  Co¬ 
lour,  bare,  or  very  thinly  fet  with  Feathers;  the  Crown  of  the  Head  is  cover’d  with 
line  bright  yellow  or  gold-colour’d  Feathers,  which  it  fometimes  eredfs  into  a  Creft, 
and  fometimes  lets  fall  on  the  Neck :  The  upper  Part  of  the  Neck  is  cover'd  with 
Orange-colour’d  Feathers,  mark’d  with  tranfverfe  Bars  of  Black  ;  thefe  Feathers  it  can 
raife  as  our  Dunghill  Cocks  do  their  Feathers  when  they  fight:  The  Bottom  of  the  Neck 
and  the  Beginning  of  the  Back  are  covered  with  fine  dark-green  Feathers,  which  refledb 
a  gold  Colour,  with  black  tranfverfe  Bars  at  their  Tips;  thefe  Feathers,  as  the  Bird 
moves,  have  a  different  Motion  from  the  other  Feathers,  falling  fometimes  farther  over 
the  Back,  and  flipping  from  Side  to  Side  ;  The  Remainder  of  the  Back  to  the  Tail  is 
tCOvet’d  with  a  beautiful  golden  Yellow,  mixed  at  the  fetting  on  of  the  Wing,  and 
where  the  Feathers  fall  over  the  Tail,  with  a  few  bright  fcarlet  Feathers:  The  greateft 
.or  prime  Quills  of  the  Wings  are  duflcy  or  black,  with  yellow  brown  Spots  on  their 
Webs;  the  middle  Qifills  are  of  a  dull  Red,  mixed  and  fpotted  with  Black  :  Some  of 
4he  leffer  Quills  next  the  Back  are  of  an  exceeding  fine  full  Blue  Colour ;  the  Infide  of 
all  the  Qmlls  are  dufky ;  all  the  covert  Feathers  are  of  a  dull  Reddifli  Colour,  the  firft 
Row  that  immediately  covers  the  Qifills  inclining  a  little  more  to  Yellow,  and  have 
tranfverfe  Lines  of  Black.  The  under  Side  of  the  Bird,  from  Bill  to  Tail,  is  of  a  very 
fineRed  or  Scarlet  Colour;  theThighs  are  of  a  Clay  Colour;  the  Tail  is  aMixture  of  black 
and  Reddifli-brown  Colour;  the  two  middle  Feathers  black,  fpotted  with  round  and  fome 
irregular  Spots  of  Brown,  the  Side  Feathers  obliquely  ftreaked  Black  and  Brown,  as  ex- 
prefled.  There  flioots  over  the  great  Feather  of  the  Tail  fome  long  narrow  fcarlet  Fea¬ 
thers  with  yellowilh  Shafts,  which  extend  to  near  half  the  Length  of  the  Tail.  I  have 
exprefled  the  Tail  Feathers  more  loofe  and  feparated  than  the  Bird  generally  carries  them^ 
in  order  to  fhew  how  the  different  Feathers  are  mark’d  :  The  Legs  and  Feet  are  like 
Hen's  Feet,  but  fomething  flenderer,  of  a  Yellow  Colour,  and  hath  fhort  yellow  Spurs. 

Thefe  Birds  of  late  Years  are  frequently  brought  from  China  :  I  have  feen  feverai  of 
them  in  the  Poflelfion  of  our  Nobility,  and  fome  curious  Gentlemen,  and  have  been 
favoured  with  one  of  them  newly  dead  by  the  Lady  of  Sir  "John  Heathcotey  Bart,  which 
has  enabled  me  to  be  more  exadi  in  every  Particular  of  my  Figure  than  I  could  other- 
w.ife,  or  any  have  hitherto  been.  Thefe  Birds  are  pretty  hardy,  and  bear  our  Climate 
'^ery  well ;  and  I  believe,  were  they  brought  with  their  Hens,  might  be  bred  with  a 
little  Care.  Sir  Hans  Shane  the  Cock  now  living,  which  this  Figure  reprefents,  and 
I  think,  if  I  remember  -right,  he  has  had  it  about  1 5  Years.  The 


I 


fo 


(  69  ) 


Hen  Peacock  Pheasant,  from  China. 

This  Bird,  reprefented  by  the  upper  Figure,  is  a  third  Part  lefs  than  the  Cockj 
defcribed  Page  67.  but  agrees  with  it  in  Colour  and  Marks  more  than  any 
Birds  of  the  Pheafant  Kind  I  have  yet  obferved,  it  having  all  its  Marks,  tho’  much  duller. 
The  Bill  is  of  a  Dufky  or  Black  Colour ;  the  Iris  of  the  Eye  is  Yellow  ;  the  Plumage 
of  the  whole  Bird  is  of  an  obfcure  Brown  j  the  lower  Part  of  the  Back,  and  all  the  Tail 
Feathers  a  little  mixed  and  powder’d  with  darker  and  fome  lighter  Brown  ;  all  the  Covert 
Feathers  of  the  Wings,  upper  Part  of  the  Back,  and  the  Quills  next  the  Back,  have  each 
a  round  Spot  of  dark  Blue  near  their  Tips,  the  Tips  themfelves  being  of  a  dirty  Orange- 
colour,  or  reddilh  Brov/n  j  the  Tail  Feathers  have  each  of  them  toward  their  Tips  two 
Spots  of  dull  dark  Blue  j  all  the  Spots  want  that  fliining  Lufhre  which  Is  fo  remarkable 
in  the  Cock ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  dark  Brown,  or  blackilh  Colour ;  and  it  hath  no 
Spurs. 

The  Hen  of  the  Painted  Pheafant  from  China  (fee  the  Cock  in  Plate  68.)  the  lower 
Figure  in  this  Print  reprefen ts,  which  differs  more  widely  from  the  Cock  than  any  of 
the  Pheafant  Kind  I  am  acquainted  with ;  that  being  a  Mixture  of  the  mofl:  gay  Colours 
that  can  be  imagined,  and  the  Hen  of  the  moft  common  uniform  Colour,  v/ith  hardly 
any  Marks  of  Diflinftion  :  Its  Bill  Is  Yellow  j  the  Eye  of  a  yellowifli  Hazel  Colour,  en- 
compaffed  with  a  Space  of  dufky  Feathers ;  the  Crown  of  the  Head  is  cover’d  with  red- 
difh  brown  Feathers,  and  hath  fome  Appearance  ofaCrefl;  the  upper  Side  of  the  Neck, 
Back,  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  of  a  reddifh  Brown  Colour;  the  Feathers  juft  beneath  the 
Bill  are  White  j  the  Throat,  Breaft,  and  Belly,  are  of  a  light  yellowifli  Brown,  fpotted 
with  darker  brown  Spots,  as  expreffed  in  the  Figure ;  the  Ridges  of  the  Wings  on  the 
upper  Parts  are  of  a  whitifh  Colour;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  Yellow. 

The  Bird  firft  defcribed  in  this  Page  I  faw  with  its  Male  at  Dr.  Monroe' z  In  London^ 
where  I  drew  them  both:  The  Doctor  had  great  Hopes  of  breeding  from  thefe  rare  Birds, 
and  had  made  a  very  convenient  Place  for  them  at  his  Houfe  In  Croydon^  near  London ; 
but  the  Hen  dying  before  he  had  long  pofleffed  them,  he  was  difappointed  in  his  Ex- 
pedlation. 

The  fecond  Bird  defcribed  In  this  Page,  I  muft  confefs  to  be  on  a  weaker  Authority 
than  any  in  this  Work,  having  never  feen  the  Bird  ;  but  as  I  have  three  Sorts  of  Chinefe 
Cock  Pheafajits^  and  the  Hens  of  two  of  them,  I  was  willing  to  compleat  their  Hiftory 
in  the  beft  Manner  I  could  ;  and  having  Opportunity  to  examine  feveral  very  curious 
high-finifhed  Chinefe  Pidtures  of  the  Painted  Pheafant  drawn  together  with  its  Hen,  and 
finding  the  Cocks  to  compare  very  exadtly  with  Nature,  I  fuppofed  the  Hens  to  be  as 
like  their  Originals  as  the  Cocks,  fince  the  Hens  agree  in  Colour  with  one  another,  tho’ 
they  are  done  by  different  Hands,  and  were  brought  to  England  at  far  diftant  Times ; 
therefore  I  think  It  very  probable  that  the  lower  figure  In  the  annexed  Plate  may  be  as 
like  the  Bird  as  if  I  had  taken  it  from  Nature  itfelf ;  fome  of  my  Friends,  who  have  feen 
this  Bird  in  England^  fay  it  is,  to  the  beft  of  their  Memory,  like  the  Bird. 


F 


(  70  ) 


The  R  E  d-L  e  g  g’d  Partridge,  from  Barbarj. 

I  Take  this  Bird  to  be  fomething  lefs  than  our  common  Partridge,  fince  by  Meafure 
I  find  this  to  be  from  Bill  Point  to  the  End  of  the  Toes  1 3  Inches,  to  the  End  of 
the  Tail  but  twelve  and  a  half,  and  from  Tip  to  Tip  of  the  Wings  extended  19 
Inches.  Willoughby,  in  his  Ornithology,  has  made  our  Englijh  Partridge  Cock  from 
Bill  to  Claws  14  Inches  and  a  Quarter,  to  the  End  of  the  Tail  12  and  three  Q^rters, 
the  Breadth  from  the  Tips  of  the  Wings  extended  20  Inches  j  by  which  it  appears  that 
this  Bird  is  lefs  than  the  common  or  afh-coloured  Partridge,  tho’  Mr.  Willoughby  has 
given  the  Red  Partridge  of  France  and  Italy  a  greater  Magnitude  than  either  this  Par¬ 
tridge,  or  the  afh-coloured  one,  by  making  his  greatefl  Length  1 8  Inches,  and  his 
Breadth  22  3  fo  that  the  Difference  in  Size,  as  well  as  fome  Parts  of  the  Colouring, 
feem  to  make  a  fpecifical  Difference  between  the  Red-Legg’d  Partridges  of  Europe,  and 
thofe  on  the  Coafl:  of  Africa. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  fine  Scarlet  Colour  3  the  Eyes  are  of  a  Hazel  Colour  5  the  Eye-lid, 
all  round  the  Eyes,  of  a  fine  Red  Colour  3  the  Top  of  the  Head  is  of  a  bright  Chefnut 
Colour,  which  paffes  down  the  Hind-part  of  the  Head,  where  it  becomes  more  dusky, 
and  comes  forward  and  forms  a  Ring  quite  round  the  Neck,,  which  Ring  is  fpotted 
throughout  with  round  white  Spots :  The  Sides  of  the  Head  and  Throat  are  of  light 
blueifh  Afh-colour,  which  Colour  pafles  all  round  the  Eyes  3  on  each  Side,  about  the 
•Place  of  the  Ears,  is  a  dufky  Spot  3  the  fore  Part  of  the  Neck,  below  the  Ring,  is  of 
an  Afh-colour,  which  gradually  changes  on  the  Breaft  to  a  fiiint  Rofe  or  Bloffom  Co¬ 
lour  :  The  Belly,  Thighs,  and  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  are  of  a  light  Browa 
or  Clay  Colour;  the  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back,  and  Wings,,  are  of  darkifh  Brown, 
inclining  to  Afh-colour  3  the  prime  Quills  of  the  Wings  fomething  darker  than  the 
other  Feathers,  edged  for  a  little  Space  toward  their  Tips  with  a  light  yellowifh 
Brown  Colour  3  the  Infide  of  the  Qmlls  of  a  dark  Afli-coloar,,  and  the  inner  Coverts  of 
the  Wings  inclining  to  Clay  Colour  3  the  Feathers  that  grow  on  the  Shoulders,  and 
fall  between  the  Back  and  Wings,  are  of  a  pleafant  Blue  Colour,  bordered  with  a  dark 
Red  :  The  Sides  are  covered  with  beautiful  Feathers,  tranfverfly  variegated,  their 
Tips  being  Orange-colour,  within  which  are  tranfverfe  Bars  of  Black,  fucceeded  by 
Bars  of  White,  the  remaining  and  hidden  Part  being  Afh-colour  3  thefe  Feathers  fall- 
partly  over  the  Wings :  The  Rump  is  afh-colour’d  3  the  middle  Feathers  of  the 
Tail  of  the  fame  Colour,  but  darker,,  with  tranfverfe  Bars  of  a  dufky  Colour  3  the 
Side  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  half-way  Afh-colour  toward  their  Roots,  the  other  half 
toward  the  Tips  being  of  a  dirty  Orange  3  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  Red  Colour,  finer, 
than  what  we  fee  in  Pigeons  3  it  hath  fmall  Spurs,  and  the  Claws  are  Brown. 

A  Pair  of  thefe  Birds  were  fent  to  me  alive  by  my  good  Friend,  Mr.  Thomas  Raw¬ 
lings,  Merchant,  refiding  at  Santa  Cruz,  in  that  Part  of  Barbary  which  lies  without 
the  Streights  of  Gibraltar,  on  the  Atlantic  Ocean.  I  have  not  heard  that  the  Red- 
Legg'd  Partridge,  either  European  or  African,  were  ever  increafed  in  England,  tho’ 
both  Sorts  are  frequently  brought  hither..  They  who  are  curious  to  fee  what  has  been 
faid  of  the  European  Red  Partridge  may  eonfult  Willoughby'^  Ornithology,  Pat  1 67. 
fab.  29.  I  need  not  mentioa  Albin,  fince  his  Defeription  is  only  a.  Tranfeript  of 
Part  of  Willoughby^  Account., 


7'-’ 


{  7*  > 

755^  Brown  Spotted  HeathcocKo 

IT  is  fomething  bigger  than  an  Englijh  Partridge  ^  or  near  the  Bignefs  of  our  fmaller 
Sort  of  domeftick  Poultry  j  it  feems  to  be  a  little  longer  bodied,  and  hath  a  longet 
Tail,  in  Proportion,,  than  the  Partridge. 

The  Bill  is  Black,  covered  with  brown  Feathers,  which  turn  forward  over  the  Nof- 
trils  5  it  hath  a  Imall  Space  of  red  Skin  above  the  Eye ;  from  the  Balls  of  the  Bill  to  the 
Eye  there  is  a  white  Line ;  from  the  Eye  backwards  there  proceed  two  white  Lines,, 
the  lowermoft  being  the  longell :  The  Top  of  the  Head,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck  and 
Back,  are  covered  with  Feathers  of  a  dark  Brown,  intermixed  with  dirty  Orange  and^ 
Alh-colour ;  the  covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings  are  dark  Brown,  edged  with  a  lighter 
Brown,  having  a  Line  of  light  Brown  within  them  running  parallel  with  their  Edges  j; 
the  greater  Qmlls  are  dulky  or  black,  powdered  with  White  on  the  Edges  of  the  outer 
Webs;  the  lelTer  Qmlls  next  the  Back  are  light  Brown,  with  tranfverfe  Bars  of  darker 
Brown  ;  the  covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings  are  dulky,  with  white  Tips;, 
there  are  fome  Feathers  between  the  Back  and  Wings  with  white  Dalhes  long-ways 
drawn  at  their  Tips  j  the  Tail  is  of  a  dulky  Brown  or  Black,  the  middle  Feathers  barred^ 
a-crofs  with  light  reddilh Brown  inclining  to  Orange;  the  Side  Feathers  powdered  anch 
tipped  with  the  fame  Colour:  The  Throat,  beneath  the  Bill,  is  of  a  yellowilh  White,, 
with  fmall  dulky  Spots ;  the  Neck  and  Bread:  below  that,  of  a  dull  Orange-colour,, 
barred  a-crofs  with  black  Spots  in  the  form  of  Half-Moons,  with  their  Points  upvvards  ; 
there  is  fome  White  mingled  with  the  Orange  and  Black  on  the  Bread :  The  Remain¬ 
der  of  the  under  Side,,  from  the  Bread  to  the  Coverts  under  the  Tail  inclulive,  are 
White,  a  little  clouded  with  Cream-colour,  and  fpotted  with  Black  in  the  fame  Form 
as  the  Neck  and  Bread  :  The  Legs,  frpm  above  the  Knees  down  to  the  Feet,  are  co¬ 
vered  with  Feathers  having  the  Appearance  of  Hair,  of  a  Brown-colour,  variegated  with 
dne  tranfverfe  Lines  of  Black:  The  Feet  are  of  a  reddilh  Brown-colour ;  the  three 
Toes  that  dand  forward  in  each  Foot  are  pedinated  or  toothed  on  each  Side ;  the 
hinder  Toes  are  fmooth  on  the  Sides ;  the  Claws  are  pretty  long,  and  of  a  Black  Colour, 
I  take  this  Bird  to  be  a  Species  of  the  Attagen.  I  have  compared  it  with  all  the  De- 
fcriptions  I  can  find  of  this  Genus,  and  find  it  fo  different,  that  I  think  I  may  pronounce 
it  a  Species  hitherto  undeferibed.  It  was  fent  to  me  from  Hudfon' s-Bay  by  my  Friend 
Mr.  Light,  who  fays  it  continues  in.  thofe  Parts  all  the  Year.  This  Tribe  of  Birds  in 
North  America  are  Inhabitants  of  the  low  and  plain  Country  :  in  Europe  they  are 
found  only  in  high  Lands  and  on  the  Tops  of  Mountains,  whofe  Altitude  caufes  a- 
Coldnefs  in  the  Air  equal  to  that-  of  the  lower  Lands  iwHudfon' s-Bay ,  which  is  the  mod 
Northern  inhabited  Part  of  America.  Among  Authors  there  is  much  Obfeurity  and' 
Difagreement  in  what  they  have  faid  on  this  Genus  of  Birds,  mod  of  which  Mr.  Wil¬ 
loughby  has  colleded  in  his  Ornithology,  whei'.e  they  may  be  confulted'fitom  Page  172- 
toPage  178,, 


(  72  ) 


The  White  Partridge. 

HIS  Bird  is  of  a  middle  Size,  between  our  common  Partridge  and  a  Pheafant^  and  fliaped 
JL  much  like  a  Partridge^  except  that  its  Tail  is  a  little  longer. 

The  Bill  is  Black  ;  the  NoIIrils  covered  with  fmall  white  Feathers,  turning  forward  ;  the  un¬ 
der  Chop  of  the  Bill  has  alfo  white  Feathers  at  its  Root ;  the  Eyes  are  encompafled  with 
a  narrow  Space  of  white  Feathers ;  above  each  Eye  are  loofe  Eye-brows,  faftened  only  at  their 
Bottoms,  rifing  on  each  Side  higher  than  the  Crown  of  the  Head,  of  an  Inch  Length,  and  half 
an  Inch  Breadth,  compofed  of  a  Subftance  like  Plufli,  or  the  Skin  round  the  Eyes  of  a  Cock 
Pheafant^  of  a  fine  Red  Colour:  The  Head  and  Neck  are  of  a  Reddifh  Brown,  barred  a-crofs 
with  fine  Lines  of  Black,  a  few  white  Feathers  being  intermixed  in  the  fore  Part  of  the  Neck : 
The  Middle  of  the  Back  is  White,  as  is  the  whole  Wing,  except  the  Shafts  of  the  greater 
Quills,  which  are  Black :  The  variegated  Feathers  at  the  Bottom  of  the  Neck  do  not  break  off 
very  fuddenly,  but  are  fprinkled  on  the  Beginning  of  the  Back,  and  between  the  Back  and 
AVings  on  each  Side  there  is  a  fprinkling  of  them  alfo  on  the  Breaft,  and  fome  few  in  the  co¬ 
vert  Feathers  on  the  upper  Side  of  the  Tail:  The  two  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  variegated 
tranfverdy  with  Brown  and  Black  in  the  fame  Manner  as  thofe  on  the  Neck,  Cfr.  The  two 
next  on  each  Side  White  *,  the  remaining  outermoft  Tail  Feathers  of  a  dirty  Brown  or  Black  Co¬ 
lour,  tipp’d  with  White  :  The  Belly,  Sides,  Infides  of  the  Wings,  covert  Feathers  under  the 
1  ail.  Legs  and  Feet,  to  the  Ends  of  the  Toes,  are  wholly  covered  with  white  Feathers,  thofe 
on  the  Legs  and  Feet  refembling  Hair  more  than  Feathers:  The  Claws  are  of  a  Brown  Colour, 
and  pretty  long,  but  fomething  flatter  than  what  is  common  in  Birds. 

The  fluffed  Skin  of  this  Bird  is  preferved  at  Sir  Hans  Sloane^s,  from  which  I  made  my  Draught 
and  Defcription.  Mr.  light ^  who  is  now  returned  from  HudJonI  Bay  to  England^  on  feeing  this 
Bird,  faid  it  was  the  Cock  Bird,  as  it  appears  in  the  Spring,  when  it  is  changing  from  White 
to  Brown  their  Feathers  being  in  Winter  of  a  perfedt  fnowy  Whitenefs,  except  the  outer  Fea¬ 
thers  of  the  Tail,  which  are  Black  tipp’d  with  White;  they  begin  to  change  in  the  Spring, 
and  become  Brown  on  their  upper  Sides,  the  Belly  remaining  moflly  White. 

Mr.  Light  brought  one  of  thefe  Birds  from  Hudfon's  Bay,  and  gave  it  me,  which  was  perfect¬ 
ly  White;  he  fhot  it  there  in  the  Winter,  and  affures  me,  on  his  own  Knowledge,  that  thefe 
Birds  towards  Evening  repofe  themfelves  under  the  Snow,  (which  in  that  Country  is  loofe, 
like  fine  dry  Sand)  where  they  continue  all  Night,  and  in  the  Morning  fly  directly  up  to  fhake 
off  the  Snow ;  he  hath  often  feen  them  rife,  and  found  their  Dung  in  their  fnowy  Lodgings : 
He  fays  they  are  obkrved  to  feed  only  in  the  Morning  and  Evening  in  Winter,  and  fun  them- 
fclves  in  the  Middle  of  the  Day.  They  are  Natives  of  Hudfon's  Bay,  where  they  breed,  and 
continue  all  the  Year  ;  but  are  common  both  to  America  and  Europe.  I  have  received  the  very 
fame  Birds  from  Norzvay and  all  our  Treatiles  on  Birds  deferibe  them  very  exactly,  and  place 
them  in  the  Mountains  of  Switzerland,  Italy,  Spain,  &c.  It  is  not  properly  a  Partridge,  but 
of  that  Kind  we  call  Heath  Garrte.^  and  Aldrovand,  Lagopus  avis.  You  will  find  him  deferibed 
in  his  Winter’s  Drefs  in  hVilloughhy’s,  Omxiholo^y,  Pag.  176. 

The  Bird  I  took  my  Draught  from,  above  deferibed,  had  the  Red  on  the  Eye-brows  much 
wider  than  I  ever  faw  it  in  any  among  the  great  Number  I  have  feen,  it  being  hardly  percep¬ 
tible  in  fome  when  the  Skins  are  dry ;  which  makes  me  think  this  was  an  old  Cock  in  the  Sea- 
fon  of  his  full  Vigour,  for  w'e  obferve  that  the  Combs  of  our  common  Poultry  are  much  larger 
and  redder  in  the  Spring  than  in  the  Winter  Time.  As  I  find  that  fome  of  the  Particulars  which 
I  have  difeovered  relating  to  this  Bird  are  entirely  new,  I  hope  the  Curious  will  not  think  my 
Labour  and  their  Cofl  wholly  thrown  away,  notwithflanding  it  hath  been  long  ago  de- 
feribed,  and  is  well  known  to  the  Curious.  It  hath  efcaped  Mr.  Albinh  Notice. 

Lhc 


t^fi 

'..i-V  * 


•  ‘  ;  '.i#  . 


Igre^ 

*!?'  vi.  : 


(  73  ) 

The  Bustard  Cock. 

This  Bird  meafures  from  Tip  to  Tip  of  the  Wings,  when  extended,  fevenFeet  four  Inches; 

from  the  Point  of  the  Bill  to  the  Ends  of  the  Claws  three  Feet  nine  Inches  and  a  half  j  to 
the  End  of  the  Tail  three  Feet  fix  Inches ;  from  the  Angle  of  the  Mouth  to  the  Point  of  the  Bill 
three  Inches  and  a  Quarter;,  the  Leg,  from  the  Knee  to  the  Bottom  of  the  Heel,  feven  Inches 
and  a  Quarter;  Middle  Toe  near  three  Inches;  prime  Quills  twenty  Inches;  the  Wing  when 
clofed  two  Feet :  It  weighed  20  Pounds,  at  16  Ounces  to  the  Pound,  To  bring  this  Figure  with¬ 
in  the  Compals  of  my  Page,  I  reduced  my  Foot  to  three  Inches ;  which,  according  to  my  Way 
of  Pjvjfion  by  folid  Squares,  makes  this  Figure  to  Nature  as  i  to  64.  It  is  undoubtedly  the  biggeft 
Bird  produced  in  the  Kingdoms  of  Great  Britain  and  Ireland. 

,  The  Bill  is  of  a  lightilh  Horn-colour,  a  little  inclining  to  Yellow ;  the  Eyes  are  Orange-colour ; 
the  Head  and  Neck  are  of  a  fine  light  Alh-colour,  inclining  to  Blue  ;  the  fore  Part  of  the  Neck, 
in  the  Middle,  very  light,  or  white  :  It  hath  long  Feathers  proceeding  from  the  Sides  of  the  lower 
Mandible  of  the  Bill,  which  tend  backwards  in  the  Form  of  Whifkers ;  but  thefe  are  wanting  in 
,  the  Females :  On  each  Side  of  the  Neck  the  Skin  is  bare  of  Feathers,  of  a  Violet-colour,  which 
Skin  is  covered  with  the  Feathers  when  the  Neck  is  much  extended  :  It  hath  a  fmall  Intermixture 
of  Orange-colour  in  jthe  Middle  of  the  Crown  of  the  Head  ;  but  what  is  moft  furprizing  in  this 
Bird  was  firft  difcovered  by  ^t\zx.z  James  Douglafs.,  M.  D.  Fellow  of  the  College  of  Phyficians ; 
it  is  a  Pouchor  Bag  to  hold  frefh  Water,  which  fupplies  the  Bird  in  dry  Places  when  diftant  from 
Waters;  the  Entrance  into  it  is  between  the  under  Side  of  the  Tongue  and  the  lower  Mandible 
of  the  Bill :  This  Bag  is  reprefented  blown  up  by  the  Letter  A.  I  poured  into  it,  before  the  Head 
was  taken  off,  full  feven  Wine  Pints  fwhich  about  equals  feven  Pounds  of  our  common  Weight) 
before  it  run  over.  B.  Shews  the  Wind-pipe.  C.  The  Throat,  or  common  PafTage  of  the 
.  Food.  This  Bag  is  wanting  in  the  Hen.  The  lower  Part  of  the  Neck  behind,  the  whole  Back, 
Rump,  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail,  and  leflfer  Coverts  of  the  Wings,  are  of  a  bright  Brown  or 
Orange-colour,  beautifully  barred  tranfverfely,  and  in  fome  Parts  fpotted  and  powdered  irregu¬ 
larly  with  Black ;  the  Down  at  the  Roots  of  the  Feathers  all  over  the  Body  is  of  a  pleafant  red 
Rofe-colour ;  the  Side  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  White,  a  little  clouded  with  faint  Orange,  and  blue 
Afh-colour,  with  each  a  tranfverfe  Bar  of  Bla,ck  near  their  Tips;  It  hath  32  or  33  ^ills,  or 
prime  Feathers,  in  each  Wing ;  the  firft  feven  or  eight  of  a  dark  Afh-colour,  with  white  Shafts ; 
then  follows  about  1 5,  having  their  bottom  Halves  White,  the  Remainder  to  their  Tips  being 
Black,  but  the  Black  becomes  gradually  lefs  deep  as  they  are  nearer  the  Body,  and  wholly  difap- 
,  pears  in  the  25th  or  26th  Quill ;  then  follows  five  or  fix  purely  White;  the  remaining  three  or  four 
next  the  Back  of  the  fame  Colour  with  the  Back :  All  that  Part  of  the  Wing  which  falls  on  the  Breaft 
and  Belly  is  White,  a  little  clouded  with  a  light  Afh-colour,  which  Whitenefs  takes  up  the  lower 
Part  of  the  Wing  when  it  is  clofed,  from  the  Joint, or  Shoulder  almoft  to  the  End  of  the  Wing; 
The  Breaft,  Belly,  Thighs,  Coverts  beneath  the  Tail,  Sides  under  the  Wings,  and  covert  Fea- 
.  thers  within  Side  of  the  Wings,  are  purely  White :  The  Legs  are  ftrong,  covered  with  fmall 
-  Scales ;  the  Feet  are  thick  and  clumfy  ;  it  hath  a  round  Heel,  and  three  Toes,  which  are  fhort  in 
Proportion,  all  ftanding  forward  ;  the  Claws  are  ftrong,  not  very  fharp  pointed  ;  and  the  Legs 
and  Feet  are  of  a  dirty  Flefh,  inclining  to  Afh-colour. 

Thofe  who  would  fee  the  Anatomy  of  this  Bird,  may  confult  the  Baris  Memoires  de  V Academic 
Royale  des  Sciences.,  depuis  1666.  jufqu*  a  1699.  Tom  3.  Seconde  Partie,  p.  101.  where  is  an 
.  Anatomical  Defcription  of  fix  Males,  in  which  they  have  miffed  the  Difcovery  of  the  curious  Refer- 
voir  for  Water,  the  chief  Ufe  of  which  I  take  to  be  forfupplying  the  Hen  whilSTitting,  and  for 
the  young  ones  before  they  can  fly  to  help  themfelves  to  Water. 

This  Bird  was  prefented  to  me  frefli,  and  in  fine  order,  by  Mr.  Daniel  Gwilt  of  Milk-Street 
London,  my  much  efteemed  Friend  and  Relation.  I  have  been  informed  by  a  curious  Gentleman 
of  Norfolk^  who  has  weighed  fome  of.  the  largeft  Cocks,  that  they  have  fometimes  exceeded  27 
Pounds,  of  16  Ounces. 

G  ne 


(  74  ) 


The  Hen  Bustard. 


This  Bird  was  fo  different  from  the  Cock  in  Magnitude,  that  I  fliould  have  fLifpefted  rt 
to  be  a  young  one,  not  fully  grown,  had  I  not  bought  it  at  London  in  the  Beginning  of 
the  Month  of  May^  at  which  Time  I  fuppofe  thefe  Birds  are  either  little  Chickens,  or  have  attain¬ 
ed  their  full  Growth,  as  all  the  Birds  I  know  of  in  England  \\2iVCy  long  before  they  are  a  Year 
old.  This  Hen  Bird  meafured  from  Tip  to  Tip  of  the  Wings  extended  only  66  Inches,  where¬ 
as  the  Cock  meafured  88  *,  and  the  Meafures  were  lefs  in  all  its  other  Parts  in  about  the  fame  Pro¬ 
portion.  Now  if  one  computes  the  Difference  between  two  folid  Square  Quantities,  where  any 
fuperficial  Part  is  as  66  to  88,  after  each  Number  is  doubly  multiplied  by  itfelf,  the  Difference 
of  Quantity  between  the  Cock  and  Hen  will  be  as  678172,  to  287496,  which  fliews  the  Hen  to 
fall  fhort  of  half  the  Quantity  of  the  Cock,  and  is  a  greater  Difproportion  than  I  have  yet  ob- 
ferved  between  the  Males  and  Females  of  any  other  Kind,  In  Birds  of  Prey  the  Females  gene¬ 
rally  exceed  the  Males  in  Bulk. 

The  Bill  of  this  Bird  is  of  the  fame  Colour  and  Shape  with  that  of  the  Cock ;  the  Tongue  is 
fharp  pointed  and  jagg’d  on  the  Sides ;  the  Infide  of  the  Mouth  is  of  a  pale  Flelh  Colour ;  it 
wholly  wants  the  Water-pouch,  there  being  no  Pallage  under  the  Tongue  as  in  the  Cock  -,  the 
Eyes  are  of  an  Orange  or  Golden  Colour ;  the  Head  is  of  a  dirty  Brown,  inclining  to  Alh-co- 
lour,  except  the  Crown,  which  is  bright  Orange,  with  tranfverfe  Lines  of  Black :  The  fore 
Part  of  the  Neck  is  of  a  blueifli  Afh-colour ;  the  hind  Part  of  the  Neck,  Back,  Wings,  and 
Tail,  are  like  thofe  of  the  Cock,  but  not  quite  fo  bright  coloured ;  the  Wing  difers  from  the 
Cock’s,  in  that  the  Edge  or  Ridge  which  falls  on-  the  Bread:  and  Belly  is  covered  with  black 
Feathers and  the  White  which  runs  the  Length  of  the  Wing  when  clofed  is  not  fo  broad  as  in 
the  Cock  :  The  Side  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  White  at  both  Extremes,  with  a  Dafh  of  Reddifh 
in  their  Middles,  and  tranfverfe  broken  Bars  of  Black  near  their  Tips:  The  Quills  are  Black  fo 
far  as  they  appear  uncovered,  their  Bottoms  being  White;  the  Infide  of  the  Wings,  and  whole 
under  Side,  is  White,  as  in  the  Cock ;  the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  for  Shape  and  Colour,,  a- 
gree  both  in  Cock  and  Hen  :  A  few  of  the  prime  Quills  have  white  Shafts. 

This  Bird  has  been  already  briefly  defcribed  by  Wilioughl^,  where  there  is  a  grofs  Miftake  in 
ike  Meafure  of  its  Length  from  Bill  to  Tail  End,  which  he  makes  60  Inches.  Albin  has  tranP 
cribed  him,  and  propagated  this  Error,  which  fliews  he  never  examined,  or  perhaps  faw  the  Bird, 
for  his  Figures  both  of  the  Male  and  Female  are  taken  from  the  Print  in  the  Memoirs  of  the 
Paris  Academy :  He  has  given  his  Female  the  long  Feathers  or  Whiskers,  which  appear  only 
in  the  Male ;  and  has  not  given  one  Word  of  Defcription  to  his  Female,  becaufe  he  could  find 
none  fn  any  Author  to  tranfcribe :  So  *tis  certain  his  Figure  of  the  Hen  is  meer  Fiftion.  As 
thefe  Birds  are  fo  Capital  in  their  Nature,  and  we  have  no  perfed:  Hiftory  of  them,  and  the 
full  Difcovery  of  the  Water-pouch  in  the  Cock  being  entirely  new,  I  hope  the  Curious  will  not 
think  my  publifliing  thefe  Figures  and  Defcriptions  loft  Labour.  Mr.  Willoughby  fays,  “  they 
“  feed  on  Corn,  Seeds  of  Herbs,  Coleworr,  Dandelion  Leaves,  ^c.  They  are  found  in  open  plain 
Countries  in  many  Parts  of  England^  efpecially  on  Salisbury  Plain,  for  which  Reafon  I  have  deco¬ 
rated  this  Figure  with  a  diftant  View  of  the  Antiquity  of  Stonehenge.  I  dined  upon  the  Hen 
Bird  here  defcribed  with  the  late  Dr.  James  Douglas.^  for  whom  1  procured  it,  and  found  it,  the 
Breaft  in  Particular,  to  be  fliort  and  very  tender  Meat,  of  an  agreeable  high  Relifli.  The  Au¬ 
thors  who  have  treated  of  this  Bird  are,  Pierre  Belton  de  la  Nature  des  Oyfeaux,  Pa.  *236.  Wil~ 
loiighhfi,  Ornithology,  Pa.  178.  Pah.  32.  The  Natural  Hiftory  of  Animals  tranflated  from  the 
Royal  Academy  of  Sciences  of  Paris.,  Anno  1702,  by  A.  P.  Secretary  of  the  Royal  Society, 
Pa.  1.96,  Albin  on  Birds  need  not  be  examined,  feeing  his  Figures  are  copied  from  the  Paris 
Academy,  and  his  Defcription  from  Willoughby.  He  had  been  told  by  Dr.  Douglas  of  the 
Water-pouch  in  the  Cock,  which  he  has  barely  mentioned,  but  not  having  feen  it,  knew  no¬ 
thing  of  its  Situation,  or  the  Qiiantity  it  would  contain,  the  Doftor  not  having  then  made  a 
jLrnonftraiion  of  the  Truth  of  the  Fad.  .  Dr.  Phomas  Moffet^  in  a  Treatife  of  the  Nature  of 
Foods  and  their  Preparations,,  calls  the  BuJiarAe  both  x  dainty  and  wholfome  Meat., 


(  75  ) 


7he  triangular  Spotted  Pigeon. 

This  Bird  is  of  the  Figure  and  Bignefs  of  the  larger  Kind  of 
tame  Pigeons ,  commonly  bred  with  us  in  our  Houfes. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  Dusky  or  Black  Colour,  fhaped  as  in  common  Pi^ 
geons ;  the  Riling  between  the  Noftrils  afh-colour’d ;  the  Iris  of  the  Eye 
of  a  bright  Yellow,  inclining  to  Gold-colour ;  round  the  Eye  is  a  good 
Space  of  bright  red  Skin,  having  no  Feathers,  one  Corner  of  it  extend¬ 
ing  to  the  Angle  of  the  Mouth,  and  the  other  toward  the  hinder  Part 
of  the  Head  :  The  whole  Head,  Neck,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  covert  Fea¬ 
thers  under  the  Tail,  are  of  a  light  Alh-colour ;  round  the  red  Borders 
of  the  Eyes,  in  the  lower  Belly,  and  under  the  Tail,,  the  Afh-colour 
gradually  fades  away  to  an  almofl:  White ;  the  Feathers  all  round  the 
Neck  end  in  Iharp  Points,  and  are  tinged  on  their  Edges  with  a  red  Wine 
Colour ;  the  upper  Part  of  the  Back,  all  the  covert  Feathers  of  the 
Wings,  and  fome  of  the  Quills  next  the  Body,  are  of  a  pleafant  reddilh 
Brown,  inclining  to  Rofe-colour,  and  in  fome  Pofitions  to  the  Light  it 
fhews  a  little  purpliih  ;  all  the  Coverts  of  the  Wings,  and  fome  few  of 
the  Quills  next  the  Body,  are  beautifully  painted  with  triangular  white 
Spots,  which  are  greater  or  lefs  as  the  Feathers  vary  in  Size,  and  are  plac’d 
on  the  Point  of  each  Feather  with  their  fharpeft  Angles  to  the  Roots,  and 
their  narrowed  Sides  toward  the  Tips  of  the  Feathers:  The  greater 
Quills  are  Black,  the  Edges  of  their  Webs  being  light  Afh-colour ;  tlie 
lower  half  of  the  Back  and  Rump  is  AVhite  ;  the  Feathers  that  cover  the 
Tail  light  Afh-colour  ;  the  Tail  Feathers  of  a  dark  Afh-colour,  black  at 
the  Ends  of  all  the  Feathers  more  than  an  Inch  deep ;  the  Legs  and  Feet 
are  like  thofe  of  other  Pigeons^  of  a  middling  Red  Colour ;  and  the 
Claws  are  Brown. 

The  Original  from  which  this  Print  v;as  ingraved  I  drew  fome  Years  ago 
at  the  Duke  of  Richmond^  Houfe  in  London^  where  I  faw  a  Pair  of  them : 
The  Perfon  who  prefented  them  informed  his  Grace  that  they  were 
brought  from  the  inland  Parts  of  Guinea  in  Africa.  They  are  natu¬ 
rally  wild  Pigeons.  I  have  not  met  with  many  of  this  Tribe  tliat  excei- 
this  in  its  fine  Bloom  Colours  and  Elegancy  of  Manks,. 

Ithe 


(  76  ) 


7he  Brown  Indian  Dove. 

This  Dove  is  about  the  Bignefs  of  the  fmall  white  Dove,  which 
is  bred  with  us  only  in  Cages ;  its  Figure  here  reprefented  being 
pretty  near  its  full  Bignels. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  dusky  Black  Colour  ;  the  Circle  round  the  Eye  of  a 
very  bright  Scarlet,  inclining  to  Gold-colour ;  the  Eyes  are  encorhpafled 
with  Spaces  of  bare  Skin  of  a  fine  Blue  Colour,  which  join  to  the  Cor¬ 
ners  of  the  Mouth  on  each  Side  forward,  and  end  backward  in  Angles  a 
little  behind  the  Eyes :  The  fore  Part  of  the  Head,  Neck,  and  Breaft, 
are  of  a  light  yellowifh  Brown ;  the  hinder  Part  of  the  Head  and  Neck 
are  of  a  darker  Brown ;  beneath  the  Ears  on  each  Side  is  a  long  black 
Mark,  tranfverfely  placed,  compofed  of  very  fhort  Feathers,  fo  that  it 
doth  not  appear  unlefs  the  Bird  extends  her  Neck  a  little;  the  Feathers 
beneath  thefe  Marks  have  a  greenifli  and  golden  Luftre,  by  Turns,  at  dif¬ 
ferent  Views ;  the  Remainder  of  the  hind  Part  and  Sides  of  the  Neck 
have  a  Purple  Glofs :  The  upper  Part  of  the  Back,  the  covert  Feathers  of 
the  Wings,  and  fome  of  the  ^ills  next  the  Back,  are  of  a  dark  reddifh 
Brown,  changeable  fometimes  to  a  bluer  Caft ;  the  outer  or  greater 
Quills  are  Black,  theit  Tips  being  a  little  lighter ;  the  middle  Quills  are 
Black,  with  pretty  deep  white  Tips ;  the  Coverts  alfo  covering  the  Quills 
have  deep  Tips  of  White,  which  form  an  oblique  Bar  a-crofs  the  Wing  ; 
the  Tnfides  of  the  Wings,  Belly,  and  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail, 
are  of  a  pleafant  light  blueifii  Afli- colour ;  the  lower  Part  of  the  Back  and 
upper  covert  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  of  a  dark  Afh- colour ;  the  two  mid¬ 
dle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  of  the  fame  Brown  as  the  Back  and  Wings; 
and  all  the  remaining  Feathers  on  each  Side  are  of  a  dark  Afii- colour,  with 
.  white  Tips  of  about  an  Inch  Depth :  It  frequently  Hurts  up  its  Tail  very 
fuddenly,  which  is  what  I  have  not  obferved  in  other  Doves-,  the  Legs 
•and  Feet  are  covered  with  red  Scales;  the  Claws  brown. 

My  Draught  was  taken  from  the  Bird  alive,  and  in  good  Condition 
as  to  its  Feathering.  It  was  the  Property  of  Taylor  White,  Efq;  and  I 
was  inform’d  it  came  from  Eajl-Jndies  but  I  cannot  find  any  De- 
feription  that  agrees  with  it. 

The 


I 


(  77  ) 


72^  Black-Headed  Indian  Icterus. 

This  Bird  is  figured  of  its  natural  Size  ;  it  is  fiiaped  pretty  much  like  a  Thrujh^ 
but  hath  the  Bill  fomething  fi^ronger  in  Proportion. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  hrownifli  White,  or  dirty  Flefli  Colour  j  the  Head  and  under  Side  of 
the  Neck  is  Black  j  the  Head  hath  a  Purple  GlofSj  and  the  Yellow  indented  with  the 
Black  on  the  Sides  of  the  Neck,  as  the  Figure  thews :  The  whole  Body,  the  covert  Fea¬ 
thers  of  the  Wings,  without  and  within,  and  ahnoil  the  whole  Tail,  is  of  a  bright 
fine  Yellow-colour :  The  greater  or  outermofi:  Quill  Feathers  are  Black,  their  Edges  near 
their  Roots  being  a  little  Yellow  j  the  Remainder  of  the  Quills  next  the  Body  are  tipp’d 
with  Yellow,  which  Colour  extends  a  little  Way  along  their  outer  Webs  j  the  Tips  of 
the  covert  Feathers,  where  they  fall  on  the  greater  Quills,  are  Yellow,  which  form  a  dif- 
tinift  Spot  of  Yellow  a  little  above  the  Middle  of  the  Wing,  as  do  the  Tips  of  the  inner 
Quills  in  the  lower  Part ;  there  is  a  little  Mixtm-e  of  Yellow  and  Black  on  the  Ridge  of 
the  Wings  in  the  upper  Part  5  the  Tail  is  compofed  of  twelve  yellow  Feathers  of  equal 
Length,  the  two  middlemofi;  only  having  a  black  Bar  a-crofs  each  of  them  of  about  an 
Inch  Width  toward  their  Tips,  the  Tips  themfelves  for  a  fmall  Space  being  Yellow:  The 
Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  dull  blueifii  Black-colour;  it  hath  four  Toes  on  each  Foot, 
fiianding  after  the  ufual  Manner ;  the  Claws  are  black,  and  pretty  ftrong. 

Mr.  Jofeph  Dandridge,  Moorjields^  obliged  me  with  this  Bird  :  He  received 
it  from  a  Relation  of  his  at  Bengal^  in  the  Eajl-Indies :  I  have  given  it  the 
Name  of  ISlerus,  from  its  Likenefs  to  a  Bird  which  pafles  from  hotter  Countries  into 
the  Southern  Parts  of  Europe  in  the  Summer,  which  Aldrovand  has  pronounced 
the  IBerm  of  Pliny ;  but  have  call’d  mine,  by  Way  of  Difi:in<5lion,  black-headed, 
feeing  the  other  hath  the  Head  all  Yellow,  except  a  black  Line  on  each  Side  from  the 
Corners  of  the  Mouth  to  the  Eyes ;  the  Coverts  of  the  Wings  in  that  are  Black,  and  in 
mine  Yellow ;  the  whole  Bodies  in  both  arc  wholly  Yellow,  and  they  are  both  found  in 
Bengal,  fo  may  equally  claim  the  Name  of  Indian.  They  who  would  fee  the  Difie- 
rence  between  this  and  the  other,  may  find  that  defcribed  very  v/ell  in  Willoughby  ^ 
Ornithology,  p.  198.  by  the  Name  of  the  WitwalP,  and  as  ill  by  Albin,  in  Lis  Hiftory 
of  Birds,  Vol.'^.  p.  19.  where  he  calls  it  the  2?//(5wB/r^/ from  ;  he  acknowledges 

he  faw  only  a  Picture  of  it.  I  have  by  me  Drawings  of  both  thefe  Kinds  from 
Nature,  after  very  perfedl  Specimens.  The  Bird  here  figured  will,  I  believe,  be  per- 
fedtly  new  to  the  Curious  in  thefe  Parts  of  the  World,  I  find  no  Figure  or  Mention  of 
it  in  any  Natural  Hiftoriaii  or  Voyager. 


H  - 


4 


(  78  ) 


The  Lesser  Mock-Bird. 

I  Have  called  this  Bird  the  leffer^  becaufe  it  appears  to  me  not  near  fo  big  as  the 
Mock-Birds  I  have  feen  brought  over  from  the  Continent  of  North-America :  I 
have  Drawings  by  me  of  thofe,  as  well  as  this.  Mr.  Catesby,  in  his  Hiftory  of  Ca¬ 
rolina,  has  figured  what  I  fuppofe  to  be  the  greater,  Vol.  I.  Pa.  27.  This  differs  alfo 
from  the  other,  in  having  the  under  Side  White,  which  in  that  is  light  brownifh  Afh- 
colour.  This  Figure  reprefents  the  Bird  of  his  natural  Bignefs,  being  meafured  in  all 
his  Parts. 

The  Bill  is  flender,  pretty  ftreight,  of  a  blackifh  Brown-colour  ;  it  hath  fmall  ftiff 
Briflles  on  each  Side  above  the  Corners  of  the  Mouth  of  a  dark  Colour  j  from  the  Nof- 
trils  through  the  Eye  there  pafies  a  dufky  Line;  above  each  Eye,  from  the  Bafis  of  the 
Bill,  there  paffes  a  whitifhLine;  the  Top  of  the  Head,  hind  Part  of  the  Neck  and 
Back,  is  Afh-colour,  a  little  fhaded  and  intermixed  with  Brown ;  the  Sides  of  the 
Head,  under  Side  of  the  Neck  and  Body,  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  and  Co¬ 
verts  within  Side  of  the  Wings,  are  White,  a  little  clouded  with  Cream-colour  in 
fomc  Places.  The  Afh-colour  on  the  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  and  the  White  on  the 
under,  are  mixed  by  being  fprinkled  one  into  the  other;  the  Wing  Feathers  are  mofi:- 
ly  of  an  equal  dark  brownifh  Afh-colour,  as  are  the  middle  Feathers  of  the  7  ail ; 
the  Bottoms  of  the  middle  Qmlls  of  the  Wings  are  White,  the  Tips  Brown  ;  a  few  of 
the  Quills  nearer  the  Back  have  white  Tips ;  the  Row  of  covert  Feathers  next  above 
the  Quills  have  white  Tips  ;  thofe  next  the  Back  the  narrowcff,  and  they  next  the 
Belly  deeper,  with  each  a  dark  Spot  within  the  Tip ;  the  leffer  Coverts  have  fome 
few  fmall  Dafhes  of  White  drawn  long-ways  on  the  Feathers  ;  the  Ridge  of  the  Wing 
is  White;  the  two  outer  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  wholly  White ;  the  two  next  have 
only  their  inner  Webs  White  ;  the  remaining  Feathers  in  the  Middle  dufky  Brown;  the 
middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  fomething  longer  than  thofe  on  the  Sides  ;  the 
Legs  and  Feet  are  Black;  the  Toes  Rand  after  the  ufual  Manner,  and  it  hath  black 
Claws. 

T.  White,  of  Lincoln' s-Inn,  Efq.  favoured  me  with  this  Bird  vvell  preferved  dry  ^ 
it  was  brought  from  the  Ifland  of  Jamaica.  This  individual  Species,  I  believe,  is  de- 
fcribed  and  figured  by  Sir  Hans  Shane  in  his  Voyage  to  Jamaica,  &c.  Vol.  II.-P^7. 
306.  Lab.  256  There  is  alfo  an  Account  of  two  Species  of  thefe  Birds  extracted 
from  Francis  Hernandez,  which  may  be  found  tranflated  into  Fnglijh  in  the  Appen¬ 
dix  to  Willoughby' %  Ornithology,  Pa.J^^.  they  are  called  Poliglottos  and  Fzaupan.  Thofe 
who  have  a  Mind  to  compare  this  Bird  with  that  which  I  fuppofe  to  be  the  greater, 
and  fpecifically  different  from  mine,  may  confult  Mr.  Catesby's  Works,  where  they 
W’ill  find,  a  good  Figure  and  Defcription.  of  him.. 


'  ' 


'v(r 


I* '*'j ';!/■’. 

'0=7’. 


;■  ■  ■' 

•. ,''  ■.:»;  k-  -  '/,'!}.'»VV 

.■'•<*:■  ■;'  ;  I  .  ,  Rt,  ..  ; 

'•■'  ■  '-•  •  ■■«.  V  A;  J 

*5_  _/  W4x\  if 

S  ,,  - 


(  79  ) 


The  Green  Indian  Fly-Catcher. 


This  Figure  reprefents  the  Bird  of  its  natural  Bignefs ;  it  is  a 
flender-biH’d  Bird,  and  of  that  Tribe  that  generally  feed  oa^ 

Inleds. 

The  Bill  is  black  or  dusky,  a  little  inclining  to  Yellow  near  the  Head,, 
and  a  very  little  bowed  downwards;  the  Top  of  the  Head,  upper  Side 
of  the  Neck  and  Back,  are  of  a  Green-colour,  pretty  dark  ;  the  Rump' 
and  upper  Coverts  of  the  Tail  green,  but  fomething  lighter;  the  Sides  of 
the  Head,  Throat,  Bread:,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  covert  Feathers  under  the 
Tail,  are  Yellow,  a  little  clouded  with  Green  ;  on  the  Head  and  Sides  of 
the  Neck,  the  dark  Green  of  the  upper  Side,  and  the  Yellow  on  the- 
lower,  lofe  themfelves  in  each  other  :  The  Wings  are  dark  Brown  or 
Black ;  fome  of  the  Quills  are  yellow  on  the  Edges  of  their  Webs ;  the 
lird:  and  fecond  Row  of  covert  Feathers  on  the  upper  Side  of  the  Wings 
have  white  Tips,  which  make  two  Bars  of  White  a-crofs  the  upper  Part 
of  each  Wing  ;  the  Infide  of  the  Wing  Feathers  is  fomething  fainter 
than  the  Outfide ;  the  Tail  is  of  the  fame  dark  Green-colour  with  the 
Back  ;  the  Legs,,  Feet,  and  Claws,  are  of  a  dark  Brown,  or  Black- 
colour. 

Mr.  Dandridge  obliged  me  with  this  Bird  ;  it  was  fent  to  him,  with 
others,  from  Bengal.  In  my  Searches  I  cannot  difeover  any  Defeription 
agreeing  with  this,  fo  I  conclude  it  will  be  accepted  as  a  Bird  hitherto, 
undeferibed.  The  Englijh  Birds  that  come  neared:  it,  are  the  Golden- 
crown  d  Wren.^  and  a  little  yellow  Bird,  without  Name,  dcTcribed  by 
Willoughby  in  his  Ornithology,  p.  227,  228.  Mine  agrees  with  the  drdr 
of  thefe  in  the  Colour  and  Marks  of  the  Wing,  but  wants  the  golden 
Crefb,  is  brighter  colour’d  in  the  Body,  and  hath  a  longer  Tail.  It  agree# 
lefs  with  the  fecond,  that  having  no  Marks  in  its  Wings.  Mine  feemed 
to  be  almoft  double  the  Bignefs  of  either  of  them.  1  believe  it  may  be  of 
that  Willoughby  calls  Fig- eater p.  216.  of  his  Ornitiiology,  they 

being  Birds  of  this  Size  and  Shape ;  but  none  of  them  are  fo  Green  as  my 
Bird. 


(  So  ) 

7he  Small  American  Redstart. 

TH  E  Figure  of  this  Bird  here  reprefented  is  of  its  natural  Size  :  The  Bill  is 
ftreight  and  flender,  but  fomething  broad  from  Corner  to  Corner  of  the  Mouth, 
of  a  Dufky  Colour,  paler  toward  the  Head,  and  black  at  the  Point  j  the  Bahs  of  the 
upper  Mandible  has  on  each  Side  black  Hairs  or  Briftles ;  the  Head,  Neck,  Back  and 
Wings  without  Side,  are  Black,  except  the  Bottoms  of  the  Qinlls,  which  are  Orange- 
Colour  j  tho’  the  fmalleft  Quills  next  the  Back  are  all  Black;  the  Sides,  and  all  the 
coveit  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings,  are  of  a  bright  Orange-Colour,  which  be¬ 
ing  one  of  his  greateft  Beauties,  I  have  given  him  an  Adlion  on  Purpofe  to  Ihew  it : 
The  Black  from  the  lower  Part  of  the  Neck  extends  in  a  blunt  Point  into  the  Breaft, 
from  whence  proceeds  a  white  Lift  along  the  Belly,  which  becomes  broader  by 
Degrees ;  fo  that  the  Thighs,  lower  Belly,  and  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  are 
White,  except  a  few  black  Spots  in  the  hinder  Part  of  the  Belly :  when  the  Wings 
are  clofed  there  is  feen  a  good  deal  of  Orange  on  the  Breaft;  the  two  middle 
Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  wholly  Black  ;  all  the  Side  Feathers  are  Orange-Colour 
at  their  Bottoms,  and  Black  at  their  Tips ;  the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  are  black. 

Mr.  Cowell^  Surgeon,  in  Lombard-Street^  obliged  rne  with  a  Sight  of  this  Bird ; 
he  received  it  from  Jamaica^  with  fome  others.  I  find  in  Sir  Hans  Sloane's,  Hiftory 
of  Ja7naica  a  Defcription  of  this  Bird,  but  no  Figure.  You  may  find  it  by  the  Name 
of  the  fmall  Black  and  Orange-colour'' d  Bird^  VoL  II.  Pa.  312.  Mr.  Catesby  in  his  Na¬ 
tural  Hiftory  of  Carolina  has  mentioned  it  alfo,  VoL  I.  Pa.  67.  where  you  will  find  a 
Figure  of  it.  He  fays,  “  Thefe  Birds  frequent  the  ftiady  Wood  of  Vhgmia^  and  are 
feen  only  in  Summer,  and  that  the  Hens  are  Brown.”  He  calls  it  the  Redftart^ 
whofe  Example  I  have  taken,  as  I  think  the  Name  very  proper ;  Sir  Hans  Shane 
has  given  it  no  Englijh  Name.  Seeing  it  is  a  Bird  of  Paftage  in  Virginia^  I  fuppofe 
it  may  be  fo  too  in  Jamaica^  which  may  be  perhaps  its  Winter  Habitation  ;  but  of 
this  I  have  received  no  Account.  This  Plate  was  finifhed,  and  the  Colouring  far 
advanced,  before  I  recollected  the  Bird  to  be  in  Mr.  Catesby' %  Works;  otherwife  I 
fliould  have  omitted  it :  But  I  hope  it  will  not  be  altogether  loft  Labour,  fince  there 
are  many  Encouragers  of  this  Work  who  have  not  been  Purchafers  of  Mr.  Catesby's 
Natural  Hijiory. 

The  Butterfly  here  figur’d  was  given  me  by  Mr.  Peter  Colinfoni  h  was  brought  from 
Montferrat  in  the  Wefl-Indies :  It  is  Black,  fpotted  with  Yellow,  having  no  other  Co¬ 
lours  on  the  upper  Side,  except  two  fmall  red  Spots  in  each  of  the  fliorter  Wings 
near  the  Body  of  the  Fly  ;  the  under  Side  hath  all  the  fame  Marks,  but,  inftead  of 
Yellow,  they  are  of  a  dirty  Rofe- Colour ;  and  the  Ground  or  black  Part  is  beneath 
of  a  dirty  Brown. 


The 


t«^  ■'  ;  ‘  ■  ¥''■  ■-  '  V  '  i;  - 


(  8i  ) 


little  Black,  White,  and  Red,  Indian  Creeper. 

This  curious  little  Bird  is  figured  of  its  natural  Bignefs :  I  Iiave 
given  it  the  Name  of  Creeper  from  the  Agreement  in  the  Shape 
of  the  Bill  with  our  Creeper^  it  being  bowed  down  and  fharp  pointed. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  Black  Colour,  cleft  pretty  deep  in  under  the  Eyes, 
from  the  Bill  to  the  Point  of  the  Tail ;  the  upper  Side  is  of  a  deep 
Black,  except  fome  bright  Scarlet  Spots,  the  firfi:  of  which  begins  a  little 
behind  the  Bill,  and  tak®B  up  all  the  Top  of  the  Head  from  Eye  to  Eye  ; 
the  fecond  is  in  the  Middle  of  the  hinder  Part  of  the  Neck ;  the  third 
crofles  the  Middle  of  the  Back  ;  and  the  fourth  and  laft  takes  up  the  co¬ 
vert  Feathers  of  the  Tail :  The  Tail  and  Wings  are  wholly  Black,  all 
the  black  Parts  being  very  glofiy,  and  refleding  a  dark  Blue :  The  whole 
under  Side,  Throat,  Neck,  Bread:,  Belly,  Thighs,  and  covert  Feathers 
under  the  Tail,  are  White;  the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  are  Black. 

My  Friend  Mr.  Dandridgey  in  Moorfieldsy  obliged  me  with  a  Sight  of 
this  elegant  Bird,  which  was  fent  to  him  from  Bengal  in  the  Eajl-lndies ; 
it  was  neatly  fluffed,  and  very  well  preferved,  and  frelh  in  its  Colours. 

Hoe  double  Swallow-tail’d  Butterfly. 

TH  E  Body,  Legs,  and  Horns,  are  Black ;  the  Wings  are  of  a 
very  fine  Blue-colour ;  the  upper  Wings  bordered  on  their  outer 
Edges,  and  at  their  Ends,  with  Black;  the  under  Wing  bordered  only 
on  their.outer  Edges  with  Black,  with  a  round  black  Spot  in  each  at 
their  Ends,  with  a  little  black  Mark  without  that :  The  four  Tails  are  of 
a  dusky  Colour  tipped  with  White.  The  late  Mr.  William  Goupey^  of 
Surry-Streety  obliged  me  with  a  Cafe  of  Infers,  wherein  this  was 
inclofed ;  but  could  give  me  no  Account  from  whence  it  came.  The 
under  Side  is  of  a  dull  Blue,  bordered  with  Brown,  and  fpotted  with 
near  Forty  round  and  irregular  black  Spots,  each  Spot  having  a  fine 
Line  of  a  paler  Blue  pafling  round  it. 

I  Hoe 


(.  82  ) 


T'he  Greater  Bull-Finch. 

“"13  E  I  N  G  at  a  Lofs  to  find  a  Name  for  this  Bird  (not  knowing  its 
Ij  Country)  I  at  length  pitched  upon  the  above,  it  refembling  the 
Btdl-finch  fomething  in  the  Thicknefs  of  its  Bill,  and  the  Colour  of  its 
Tiiroat  and  Breaft.  It  is  here  figured  of  its  natural  Bignefs. 

The  Bill  is  pretty  thick  toward  the  Head,  a  very  little  arched  on  the 
upper  Part,  ending  in  a  Point,  all  over  of  a  White-colour:  The  Top 
and  Sides  of  the  Head,  upper  Part  of  the  Neck,  Back,  Wings  and  Tail, 
are  all  of  a  dark  Brown  or  Black-colour,  all  the  Feathers  being  edged 
with  a  lighter  Brown,  which  makes  an  agreeable  Mixture:  The  Throat, 
under  Side  of  the  Neck,  Breaft,  and  Belly,  are  all  of  a  very  fine  Scarlet- 
colour ;  the  upper  Part  of  the  Wing,  and  a  little  Way  down  its  Ridge, 
for  a  fmall  Breadth,  is  of  the  fame  Red-colour  as  the  Breaft ;  the  In- 
fides  of  the  Wings  are  Dusky ;  the  Thighs,  lower  Belly,  and  covert 
Feathers  under  the  Tail,  are  of  a  black  Brown-colour  :  It  hath  a  fhort 
Tail  in  Proportion  ;  the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  are  of  a  light  Brown; 
it  has  four  Toes  on  each  Foot,  ftanding  after  the  ufual  Manner. 

Mr.  Blew^  Librarian  to  the  Inner -Bemple^  Londo?t^  obliged  me  with 
this  curious  Bird,  and  fome  others;  but  having  paffed  through  feve- 
ral  Hands  before  they  became  his  Property,  it  could  not  be  known  from 
whence  they  came;  yet  I  am  of  Opinion  that  it  is  from  America^  be- 
caufe  there  were  feveral  Birds  that  came  with  it  to  Mr.  Bhw<,  which  I 
knew  to  be  Americans. 


The 


5 


i '' 


_  '  ■:  ■  y 

.  .fy  X 


(  83  ) 


The  little  Brown  Bul  l-F  inch, 

The  upper  Figure  reprefents  this  Bird  of  its  natural  Bignefs :  By  the  Thicknefs 
and  Shortnefs  of  the  Bill  it  feems  to  be  of  that  Genus  of  fmall  Birds  who  com¬ 
monly  feed  on  Grain. 

The  Bill  is  white  ;  the  Top  and  Sides  of  the  Head,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back, 
Wings,  and  Tail,  are  all  of  a  dark  Brown-colour,  the  Borders  of  the  Feathers  being 
fomething  lighter  than  their  middle  Parts j  the  Infides  of  the  Wings  are  of  a  light 
Brown-colour.  The  Throat,  under  Side  of  the  Neck,  Bread:,  Belly,  Thighs,  and 
covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  are  of  a  dull-reddifli  Orange-colour  j  the  Legs,  Feet, 
and  Claws,  are  of  a  dull  Brown-colour. 

Mr.  Blew^  of  the  Inner  "Temple,  obliged  me  with  this  Bird,  but  could  not  tell 
from  what  Part  of  the  World  it  came  ;  it  was  preferved  dry,  with  others. 

The  Black  and  Yellow  Manakyn. 

H  E  lower  Figure  reprefents  this  Bird  of  its  natural  Bignefs  j  it  is  of  the  fame 
Genus  with  a  Bird  deferibed.  Fa.  21.  of  this  Book,  which  I  have  there  call’d 
the  Golden-headed  Black  Titmoufe. 

The  Bill  is  neither  thick,  nor  very  llender,  rather  bowed  down  then  directly  ftreight,. 
ending  in  a  Point,  of  a  white  Colour ;  the  whole  Head,  Neck,  Bread,  and  Belly,  as 
far  as  the  Thighs,  are  of  a  dull  yellowifh  Orange-colour  j  the  Thighs  mixed  with 
Orange-colour  and  Black;  the  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail  are  Black  ;  the  Back,. 
Wings,  and  Tail,  are  Black,  without  any  changeable  Glofs ;  the  covert  Feathers 
vdthim  Side  of  the  Wings,  and  fome  of  the  fmall  Feathers  on  the  Ridges  of  the  Wings 
without,  are  of  a  dirty  Orange-colour  ;  fome  of  the  inner  Webs  of  the  Qinll  Feathers 
are  White  near  their  Bottoms,  which  appear  in  white  Spots  on  the  upper  Side 
of  the  Wings,  except  when  the  Wings  are  clofe  gathered  up,  for  then  it  disappears;, 
the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  are  of  an  obfeure  Brown-colour. 

This  Bird  is  preferved  with  the  above  in  the  Colle6lion  of  Mr.  Blew  :  I  believe  if 
to  come  from  fome  Part  of  South- America,  near  the  equinoctial  Line,  becaufe  I  have 
by  me  Copies  of  Drawings  of  four  different  Species  which  wxre  faid  to  come  from  the 
Settlements  of  the  Hollanders,  on  the  Main-Land  of  South- America ;  one  of  them 
agrees  exactly  in  Shape,  Size,  and  Colouring,  with  this  here  figured,  except  that  it  is 
of  a  mod  bright  Red,  where  this  is  only  of  a  dirty  Orange-colour;  fo  that  ’tis  likely 
my  Bird  may  be  the  Hen,  and  that  the  Cock  of  the  fame  Species.  I  have  only  feeii 
Draughts  of  the  other  Sorts;  fo  that  it  would  be  contrary  to  my  Propofals,  at  fird  fetting: 
out  in  this  Work,  to  exhibit  them. 


'The- 


(  84  ) 


7^^  Indian  Green  Finch. 

TH  I  S  Bird  is  here  figured  of  its  full  natural  Bignefs ;  it  appears  a  little  like  a 
Canary  Bird,  but  I  think  it  is  fomething  larger. 

It  hath  a  pretty  thick  ftrong  lliort  Bill,  agreeing  in  Shape  with  mod:  of  the  Granavo- 
rious  Kind  of  fmall  Birds  with  us  j  the  upper  Part  of  a  dark  Brown  or  Blackifh  Co¬ 
lour  ;  the  nether  of  a  lighter  Brown  ;  the  Eyes  are  of  a  Hafel-colour ;  the  Top  of 
the  Head,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back,  upper  Side  of  the  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  of 
a  dirty  Green-colour  j  the  outermod  Webs  of  fix  or  feven  of  the  greater  or  prime 
Qifills  are  edged  with  White  ;  the  Tail  Feathers  are  edged  with  a  light  Yellow  Green  j 
from  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill  on  each  Side  there  pafies  through  the  Eyes  a  Bar  or  Line  of 
dirty  Green;  above  the  Eyes,  from  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill,  there  palles  a  yellow  Line  ou 
each  Side  in  the  Form  of  Eyebrows ;  from  the  Angles  of  the  Mouth  on  each  Side  there 
pafies  a  black  Line  of  half  an  Inch  long;  the  whole  under  Side,  from  the  Bill  to  the 
covert  Feathers  beneath  the  Tail,  is  of  a  Yellow  Colour,  a  little  fhaded  with  Green  on 
the  Sides  of  the  Bread  and  Belly  ;  and  on  the  Sides  of  the  Neck  the  Yellow  and  Green 
intermix  and  lofe  themfelves  in  each  other ;  the  Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  agree  in 
Shape  with  others  of  this  Kind,  all  of  a  brownidi  Afh-colour. 

Mr.  John  Hawkins  gave  me  a  Sketch  of  this  Bird,  which  he  drew  in  the  Ifland  of 
Madeira  (whither  it  was  brought  from  fome  other  Country) ;  the  Name  he  has  noted 
on  it  is  Bengalas,  which  I  fuppofe  it  takes  from  its  Country ;  he  fays  it  fings  finer 
than  a  Canary  Bird.  As  this  Drawing  was  but  dight,  I  did  not  care  to  make  Ufe  of 
it,  not  having  then  feen  the  Bird  myfelf;  but  fince  I  received  it  I  have  feen  two  of 
thefe  Birds,  and  heard  them  fing,  at  the  Houfe  of  Mr.  Blunt,  Merchant,  in  Good- 
man' s~Fields,  London  ;  I  found  the  Birds  to  agree  in  every  Thing  with  Mr.  Hawkms's 
Sketch  and  Account,  but  having  the  Life  before  me,  I  added  fomething  to  perfedl  the 
dight  Defign  I  had,  in  order  to  give  a  more  perfedl  one  to  the  Public.  I  was  in¬ 
formed  at  Mr.  Blunt's,  that  thefe  Birds  were  brought  from  the  Ea/i-Indies.  Dn  Henry 
Plumptree,  Prefident  of  the  Royal  College  of  Phyficians,  faw  thefe  Birds  at  Mr.  Blunt's, 
and  was  fo  good-  to  gain  me  Admittance  to  make  my  Obfervations  on  them. 

The  Butterfly  here  figured  is  of  the  Bignefs  of  Life ;  the  upper  Wings  are  of  a 
reddifli  Orange-colour  ;  the  under  Wings  a  little  more  inclining  to  Brown ;  both  up¬ 
per  and  under  Wings  bordered  with  a  dark  Brown,  and  Streaks  of  Black;  the  upper 
Wings  have  longifii  dark  blue  Marks  along  their  outer  Edges,  and  a  large  and  fmall 
round  Spot  in  each  Wing,  the  outer  Circle  of  each  Black,  the  next  within  Yellowifh, 
the  next  Blue,  with  a  light  blue  or  white  Spot  in  the  Middle  ;  the  lower  Wings  have 
each  a  large  round  Spot,  the  outer  Part  Black,  the  next  Yellow,  the  inner  Part  Pur- 
plifii,  clouded  with  Black  on  one  Side,  with  two  fmall  oblong  Spots  of  blueilh  White 
in  the  Middle ;  befides  this  Mark  there  is  in  each  of  the  lower  Wings  a  little  round  ob- 
feureSpot;  the  Body,  Legs,  and  Horns,  are  of  a  redd ilh  Brown- colour  ;  the  whole 
under  Side  is  of  a  dulky  Brown-colour ;  the  Spots  of  the  upper  Side  only  faintly  calling 
through.  This  Fly  was  brought  from  China  by  my  Friend  Captain  Ifaac  Worth,  who 
jprefented  me  with  a  Box  of  Infedts  from  that  Country. 

The 


'  (  85  ) 

The  SCHOMBURGER. 


I  Know  not  well  what  Clafs  to  range  this  Bird  with :  In  Colour  it 
much  refembles  the  hark  Kind,  but  the  Bill  is  much  to  large  and 
long  ;  nor  doth  it  better  agree  with  the  HhrupD  Family,  in  the  Shape 
of  its  Bill ;  it  agrees,  I  think,  beft  with  the  Buntings  though  it  hath  a 
larger  Bill,  and  different  in  Structure,  that  having  a  Knob  in  the  Roof 
of  the  Mouth,  which  is  the  Charaderiftick  of  the  Hortulene  Kind.  So 
I  muft  leave  it  to  be  claffed,  as  the  more  knowing  lhall  think  beft.  I 
often  find  more  Difficulty  to  find  a  Family  to  daft  American  Birds 
with,  than  I  do  to  range  Birds  found  in  the  moft  diftant  Parts  of  the 
old  World  :  It  is  here  figured  of  its  natural  Bignels. 

The  Bill  is  pretty  long  and  thick,  of  a  dusky  Flefh-colour,  ending  in 
a  Point ;  the  Eyes  are  of  a  Hazel-colour,  the  Sides  of  the  Head  and  the 
Throat,  for  a  fmall  Space  beneath  the  Bill,  is  Black,  which  Blacknefs 
extends  itfelf  downward  on  each  Side  of  the  Neck  almoft  to  the  Begin¬ 
ning  of  the  Wing  ;  in  this  black  Part  the  Eyes  are  placed :  The  Top  of 
the  Head,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back,  and  covert  Feathers  of  the 
Wings,  are  Brown,  fomething  brighter,  or  more  upon  the  Orange,  than 
in  the  hark  Kind,  Ipotted  with  Black,  except  the  Top  of  the  Head  ; 
the  Quill  Feathers  of  the  Wings  and  the  Tail  are  of  a  Dusky,  or  Blackifh 
Colour,  edged  with  a  bright  reddifti  Brown.  The  whole  under  Side, 
from  the  Throat  to  the  Coverts  beneath  the  Tail,  is  of  a  pleafant  light 
reddifh  Brown-colour  ;  the  Bread:  and  Belly  fpotted  with  Black  ;  the 
Feathers  all  over  the  Body  being  black  in  their  middle  Parts  and  brown 
round  their  Borders ;  the  Feathers  of  the  Shoulders  that  fall  over  the 
Wings  are  of  a  light  yellowifti  Brown;  the  Thighs,  lower  Belly,  and  Co¬ 
verts  of  the  Tail,  both  above  and  beneath,  appear  fpotlefs,  and  are  of  a 
lighter  Brown  than  the  other  Parts  of  the  Bird  ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of 
a  reddifh  Flefh-colour ;  the  Claws  are  brown ;  the  hind  Claw  is  a 
little  longer  than  ordinary,  yet  much  fhorter  than  in  the  hark  Kind. 

,  This  Bird  was  brought  alive  from  the  Spanijh  Wejl-Indies^  and  pre- 
fented  to  the  Lady  of  the  Right  Honourable  Sir  Charles  Wager ^  then 
firft  Lord  of  the  Admiralty,  at  whofe  Houfe  I  made  this  Defign. 

K  the 


(  86  ) 

The  Red-Breasted  Long-Tailed  Finch. 

TH  E  lower  Figure  in  the  Print  fhews  the  Bird  of  its  natural  Bignefs  j  the  upper 
is  reduced,  the  better  to  exprefs  it  with  its  Tail :  It  is  a  Bird  of  lively  Action, and 
a.}  r.ity  Note,  and  by  various  Motions  in  railing  and  lowering  its  long  Tail  it  makes  a 
vay  diverting  Appearance. 

The  Bill  is  Ihcrt,  and  pretty  thick  in  Proportion,  of  a  Blueilh  or  Lead  Colour  j  the 
Eyes  are  hazel-colour’d ;  the  whole  Head,  and  the  Throat  as  low  as  the  Breaft,  is  of 
a  Black-colour ;  the  Back,  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  alfo  Black,  yet  the  Edges  of  the 
greater  Wing  Feathers  appear  a  little  alh-colour’d  or  whitilh:  Its  Tail  is  like  what  is 
common  to  other  fmall  Birds,  and  there  fprings  frjom  the  Rump  above  it  a  Sort  of  fecond 
Tail,  compofed  of  only  four  Feathers,  the  two  longefl  thirteen  Inches  and  a  half  long,, 
and  three  Qiwrters  of  an  Inch  wide  near  the  Rump,  decreafing  gradually  to  lefs  than  a 
Quarter  of  an  Inch  at  their  Tips ;  between  thefe  are  two  Ihorter,  of  lix  Inches  aiid  a 
half  in  Length,  and  one  Inch  and  a  half  in  Breadth  in  the  broadeft  Parts,  falling  fud- 
denly  into  very  narrow  Points,  compofed  of  Threads  lying  together  5  the  long  Feathers 
are  fomething  arched  like  the  Feather’s  of  a  Cock's  Tail,  having  tranfverfe  Lines  a-crofs 
them,  fuch  as  we  fee  in  water’d  Silks,  there  being  no  Variety  of  Colour  in  thefe  Fea¬ 
thers,  as  they  are  all  of  a  deep  Black  :  the  Breaft  is  of  a  full  deep  Orange-colour ;  the 
hinder  Part  of  the  Neck  of  paler  Orange,  or  Golden  Colour;  the  Belly  and  Thighs  are 
White  ;  the  lower  Belly  and  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail  are  Dufky  or  Black  ;  the 
Legs,  Feet,  and  Claws,  which  agree  with  thofe  of  moft  other  fmall  Birds,  are  of  a 
Flefti-colour.  What  is  moft  extraordinary  in  this  Bird  is,  that  it  changes  its  Colour, 
and  lofes  the  long  Feathers  of  the  Tail  for  more  than  ftx  Months  in  the  Year :  About 
the  Beginning  of  November  it  ftieds  its  Tail  and  molts  its  Feathers,,  and  becomes  of  a 
mixed  Colour  ;  the  Head  being  Black  and  White  in  Streaks  ;,  the  Breaft,  Back,  and 
covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings,  of  a  reddifti  Brown,  fpotted  with  Dufky,  almoft  like  the 
Feathers  of  a%M^;  the  greater  Quills  and  Tail  Feathers  of  a  blackiftt  Brown  ;  the 
whole  Belly,  Thighs,  and  Coverts  under  the  Tail,,  White;  the  Legs  and  Bill  the  fame 
as  above  deferibed.  In  this  State  it  continues  all  the  Winter,  without  the  four  long 
Feathers  in  the  Tail.  In  the  Beginning  of  Summer  it  molts  its  Feathers  again,  when 
the  long  Feathers  of  the  Tail  begin  to  ftioot  out,  and  in  Jime^  or  the  Beginning  of  July^ 
it  becomes  again  what  it  was  in  the  foregoing  Summer.  The  upper  Figure  fhews  him  in 
his  Summer’s  Drefs ;  the  lower  reprefents  him  as  he  appears  in  Winter. 

This  Bird  was  the  Property  of  the  obliging  Mr.  of  LoLirmce-^Lcine,  London^ 

who  kept  it  alive  four  Years,,  and  carefully  obferved  the  Changes  of  it,  as  I  have  fet  them 
down  ;  he  hath  alfo  made  me  a  Witnefs  of  them,  by  inviting  me  feveral  Times  to  view 
the  Bird  in  its  different  States,  and  about  the  Times  ^its  dian.ges,  and  gi  ven  me  Liber¬ 
ty  to  make  Draughts  at  v/hat  Times  I  thought  proper.  This  Bird  was  brought  from 
Afkolam. Africa.  He  feems  to  be  briefly  deferibed  by Book  15.  Chap, 
but  1  think  improperly  claffed  with  Sparrows it  rather,  in  my  Opinion,  belonging  to 
the  tinging  Finch  Kind.  In  its  Winter’s  Drefs  it  nearly  refembles  the  Bramble  Finch, 
Our  Countryman,  Mr.  Willoughby y  in  his  Ornithology,  251.  has  tranflated  the  Deferip- 
tion  of  this  Bird  from  Aldrovanf  who  calls  it  an  Indian  long-tail d  Sparrow, ^  A  Gen¬ 
tleman,  who  lately  arrived  from  Lisbony  tells  me  the  Portuguefe  call  this  Bird  the  Wi- 
dowy  from  its  Colour,,  and  long  Train  :  He  fays  alfo,  thatthe  Hen  is  of  a  Lark  Colour,, 
having  no  long  Train.  Ifs 


(  8?  ) 


The  Purple  Water-Hen. 

This  Bird  was  of  the  Bignels  of  a  middle  fized  Uen^  though  its  Bill  and  Legs  were  much: 

larger^  the  Bill  meafured  an  Inch  and  three  Quarters  from  Point  to  the  Corners  of  the 
Mouth  i  from  the  Point  to  its  upper  Part  on  the  Crown  of  the  Head  two  Inches  and  three  Quar- 
,ters  I  the  Leg,  from  the  Knee  downward,  four  Inches  j  the  middle  Toe  without  the  Claw  four 
:Inches  long. 

.  The  Bill  is  of  a  fine  Red-colour,  Part  of  it  extending  itfelf  to  the  Middle  of  the  Crown  of  the 
Head  above  the  Eyes,  where  it  ends  in  an  oval  Figure  %  the  Bill  is  very  much  comprefled  fide- 
ways,  its  Height  being  more  than  donblo  fts  Width  j  there  is  a  great  Likenell  of  Colour  all  over 
the  Body  of  this  Bird,  fo  that  it  need  only  be  faid  that  it  is  of  a  fine  Blue,  a  little  inclining  to 
Violet,  except  the  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  which  are  White :  Yet  is  there  fome  Diverfity 
in.  the  Colourings  the  Sides  of  the  Head,  the  fore  Part  of  the  Neck  and  Breaft,  and  the  covert 
Feathers  of  die  Wings,  are  the  moft  bright  and  fhining,  and  vary  a  little  in  different  Pofitions,, 
appearing  fometimes  of  perfed  Blue,  at  other  Turns  partaking  fomething  of  Red,  which  makes  a 
Purple  Appearance,  and  in  fbme  Lights  it  feems  to  have  a  little  Glofs  of  Green  on  the  Back  r 
The  Top  of  the  Head,  hind  Part  of  the  Neck,  Thighs,  lower  Belly,  and  Quills  of  the 
Wings,  are  of  a  dark  Brown,  or  Blackifh  Colour,  having  only  a  faint  Mixture  of  Blue  in  them  i. 
the  covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings  within-fide  are  Blue;  the  Quills  within  of  a  rufty  Black the. 
Legs  are  bare  of  Feathers  an  Inch  and  half  above  the  Knees ;  both  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  pleafant 
Red-colour,  fomething  like  Rofe-colour ;  it  hath  pretty  ftrong  brown  Claws ;  the  Toes  have 
nothing  like  Fins  or  Membranes  along  their  Sides,  as  is  common  in  other  Water-Hens.  The 
Body  of  this  Bird  was  remarkably  compreffed  fideways,  contrary  to  the  Duck  Kindt 
believe  Nature  hath  given  him  this  Form,  that  he  may  the  more  commodioufly  pals  amongft 
Canes  and  Reeds,  which  generally  cover  the  Banks  of  Rivers. 

This  Bird  is  now  preferved  in  Spirits  in  the  Colled  ion  of  Sir  Hans  Shane ^  Bart;  The  Bill' 
and  Legs  were  of  a  Yellowifh  Colour  when  dead,  but  Sir  Hms  fhewed  me  a  fine  Drawing 
taken  from  the  living  Bird,  wherein  they  were  Red,  as  I  have  above  defcribed  them.  The 
Toes  of  this  Bird  are  four  in  Number,  ftanding  three  forward  and  one  backward,,  in  che 
ufual  Manner,  contrary  to  the  monftrous  and  fiditious  Accounts  many  Authors,  who  never 
faw  it,  give  of  them.  Mr.  George  Bell^  Surgeon,  in  London.,  has  toW  me  he  has  feen  of  thefe 
Birds  in  China.  The  Curious,  who  would  fee  the  Anatomy  of  this  Bird,  may  confult  Me-^ 
moires  de  L  Ac  ademie  Roy  ale  des  Sciences.,  depuis  1666.  juiqu^a  1699.  Tome  3.  troifieme  Partie,. 
p.  50.  where  it  is  called  Foule-Sultane ',  they  fuppofe  it  to  1^  tht  Porphyrio  the  Antknts They 
account  for  the  changeable  Colours  of  the  Feathers,  by  fuppofing  that  the  fine  Fibres  afe  of  dif¬ 
ferent  Colours  on  different  Sides ;  fo  that  by  different  Pofitions,  the  different  Sides  of  the  Fibres 
ftrike  the  Eye  with  different  Colours,  which  they  would  demonftrate  by:  Silks  foot  with> 
different  Colour,  which  have  the  fame  Effed  on  the  Eye.  It  was  found  true,  by  Obfervation. 
made  ^zVerfailks,  that  it  lifts  its  Meat  to  its  Mouth  with  its  Foot  as  Parrots  do;  but  that 
it  drinks  as  other  Fowls  do,  by  taking  Water  in  its  Bill,  and  raifing  its  Head  to  fwaflow  it. 

I  have  by  me  a  Print  of  Birds  publifh^d  at  Paris.,  Drawn  by  P\  Boel^  wherein  are  two  of  tbefc 
Birds,  in  pretty  Adions,  where  they  are  ealPd  Bluets ^  which  I  think  a  very  proper  Name,  for 
they  feem  at  firfl  Sight  perfedly  Blue..  I  am  fully  fatisfyM  that  no  Englijh  Author  on  Birds 
ever  defcrib’d  this  Bird  from  Nature,  therefore  I  hope  this  Draught  and  Defcription  will  be  ac¬ 
ceptable,  though  we  have  a  dark.  Account  of  the- Bird  in  Wiiloughhy^^  and  a  darker  by  Jlbin^ 


/ 


{  88  ) 

Voe  Albatross, 

This  Bird  is  big-bodied,  and  very  long  winged  *,  I  take  it  to  be  one  of  the  largeft,  if 
not  the  very  biggeft,  Water-Bird  in  the  World;  by  meafuring  him  crofs-ways,  from 
Tip  to  Tip  of  the  Wings,  he  meafured  near  ten  Feet ;  the  firft  Bone  of  the  Wing,  which  joins  it 
to  the  Body,  equals  the  Length  of  the  whole  Body,  as  appears  in  a  Skeleton  of  one  of  thefe  Birds 
I  have  by  me.  The  Wing,  from  the  Joint  to  the  End  of  the  Quills,  when  the  Wing  is  clofed, 
meafures  two  Feet ;  the  Leg,  from  the  Knee  downwards,  meafures  four  Inches  and  a  half ;  the 
middle  Toe  was  feven  Inches  long.  Thefe  Birds .  vary  in  Size,  for  the  Meafures  in  the  Skeleton . 
I  have  are  a  third  Part  lefs  in  all  its  Parts  than  what  I  have  given  here. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  dirty  Yellowifh  Colour,  fuch  as  we  fee  in  old  Boan  :  The  Bottom  Figure  in  the 
annexed  Plate  Ihews.  it  of  its  natural  Bignefs,  with  its  Grooves  and  Furrows  ;  the  Noftrils  are 
very  remarkable,  having  rifing  Coverings  over  them,  with  the  Openings > forward,  as  expreffed 
in  the  Figures:  The  Bill  is  a  little  comprefled  fide- ways  toward  the  Head,  and  gradually  be¬ 
comes  more  fo  toward  the  Point,  which  is  remarkably  hooked;  the  Crown  of. the  Head  is  of 
a  lightifh  afli-colour’d  Brown  ;  the  Remainder  of  the  l4ead,  all  the  Neck,  Bread:,  Belly,  Thighs, 
covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  and  Coverts  within  Side  of  the  Wings,  are  White:  The  hind 
Part  of  the  Neck,  Sides  under  the  Wings,  and  Sides  of  the  Bread:,  have  fome  fmall  tranfverfe 
dusfky  Lines  mixed  with  the  White  ;  the  Back  is  of  a  dirty  Brown,  with  fmall  tranfverfe  Lines 
of  Black,  and  fome  greater  Spots  of  Black  or  Lead  Colour  ;  the  Rump  is  of  a  lightifh  Brown- 
colour  ;  the  Tail  of  a  blueifh  Lead-colour,  inclining  to  Black  ;  the  Wing  of  the  fame  Colour 
with  the  Tail,  the  Quills  being  darker,  or  altogether  Black  ;  the  Ridge  of  that  Part  of  the  Wing 
next  the  Back  is  White  ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  Flefh-colour  ;  it  hath  only  three  Toes,  all 
fi:anding  forward,  and  webb’d  together ;  it  hath  alfo  a  Fin  or  Web  running  along  the  outer 
Sides  of  the  outer  and  inner  Toes  of  each  Foot,  which  I  have  not  obferved  in  any  other  Water- 
Birds,  except  on  the  inner  Toes  of  fome. 

I  have  examined  two  Birds  of  this  Kind  fluffed,  which  agreed  in  Magnitude,  and  all  other 
Refpedls,  from  which  I  made  Sketches ;  the  one  was  fhewn  me  by  George  Holmes^  Efq.  Keeper 
of  the  Records  in  the  Tower  of  London  ;  the  other  is  in  the  Pofleffion  of  Mr.  Benjamin  Cowell^ 
Surgeon,  in  Lombard-Street.  Mr.  Albin  has  given  a  Figure  of  the  Bill  of  this  Bird  ;  fee  his  Hif- 
tory  of  Birds,  Vol.  III.  Pa.  76.  and  I  believe  the  late  Dr.  James  Douglas  obliged  him  with  the 
Defcription  of  it.  Albin  confounds  this  Bird  with  one  called  in  the  Weji-Indies^  the  Man-of-War 
Bird,  wherein  he  is  wrong  ;  for,  on  examining  Voyagers  on  that  Head,  1  find  they  make  the 
Man-of-JVar  a  much  fmaller  Bird,  and  they  who  have  mentioned  the  Albatrofs  make  it  of  the 
firft  Magnitude  of  Water-Fowl ;  fo  that  I  can  by  no  Means  agree  that  they  are  the  fame  Birds. 

I  know  of  no  Figure  extant  of  this  Bird  ;  or  any  Defcription  of  it,  ,  but  fuch  as  are  commonly 
given  by  Voyagers  (who  for  the  moft  Part  are  very  general,  and  none  but  imperfed  Ideas  of 
natural  Things  are  received  from  them)  on  which  Account  I  thought  this  Figure  and  Account 
might  be  favourably  received  by  the  Encouragers  of  this  Work.  Thefe  Birds  are  brought  from 
the  Cape  of  Good  Hope.,  where  they  are  feen  in  confiderable  Numbers  :  I  have  not  heard  of  their 
being  frequent  in  any  other  Part  of  the  World.  I  have  tranfcribed  Sir  Hans  Sloane'^  Defcription  of 
the  Man-of-War  Bird  out  of  his  Hiftory  of  Jamaica,  to  Ihew  it  is  not  the  Albatrofs,  which  is  as 
follows,  Vol.  I.  Pa.  30.  “  This  Bird  fcems  very  large,  bigger  than  a  Kite,  and  Black  ;  they 

fly,  like  Kites,  very  high,  and  often  appear  immoveable  over  the  Water,  to  wait  for  and 
“  catch  fmall  Fifh  appearing  on  its  Surface  ;  they  are  fiiarp  winged,  and  their  Tail  is  forked.” 

I  tsike  Mr,  Albin’’ s  Frigate  Bird  to  be  the  fame  with  the  Man-of-War  Bird. 

Tie 


I : 


r  89  ) 


T^he  great  Black  Peteril. 

This  Bird  is  about  the  Blgnefs  of  a  Raven  ;  the  Bill,  from  the  Corner  of  the  Mouth  to 
the  Point,  is  three  Inches  long ;  from  the  Forehead  to  the  Point  but  two  Inches  ;  the 
Wing  when  clofed  is  near  15  Inches  long ;  It  is  of  Kin  to  the  Albatrofs  laft  defcribed,  yet  I 
cannot  pronounce  it  abfolutely  of  the  fame  Genus  ;  the  Shape  of  the  Bill  is  much  the  fame  with 
that,  but  a  great  ded  lefs  in  Proportion,  and  the  Noftrils  placed  together  on  the  upper  Part  of 
the  Bill ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  alfo  like  thofe  of  the  laft  defcribed,  except  that  this  hath  a  little 
Spur,  or  Claw,  where  other  Fowls  have  the  hind  Toe,  which  Spur  rifes  immediately  from 
the  Heel. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  Yellow  Colour,  not  very  bright,  but  might  be  more  lively  perhaps  when  the 
'Bird  was  living ;  the  Noftrils  feem  to  be  carried  on  in  two  Tubes  or  Pipes  joined  together,  which 
proceed  from  the  Forehead,  and  pafs  about  one  third  Part  of  the  Length  of  the  Bill  on  its  upper 
Part,  with  two  Openings  forward  ;  the  Bill  is  creafed  or  furrow’d,  and  pretty  much  hooked  at 
the  'Point,  all  which  may  be  better  conceived  from  the  lower  Figure  than  from  Defcription,  the 
Biir  being  there  drawn  of  its  natural  Bignefs  ;  It  is  fhaped  in  general  pretty  much  like  z.  Sea-Gull \ 
the  Wings  when  clofed  reaching  farther  than  the  Tail ;  the  Plumage  all  over  the  Body  is  the 
fame,  without  the  leaft  Variety  of  Shade,  it  being  of  a  very  rufty  Black,  or  blackilk  Brown;  the 
'Legs  and  Feet  were  near  of  the  fame  Colour,  or  a  little  miore  inclining  to  Flefla,  refembling  the 
“Colour  of  an  Ethiopian’ %  Skin  :  Its  Claws  are  Black  ;  it  hath  a  little  Claw  or  Spur  rifing  out  of 
the  Heel  immediately,  and  not  by  a  Toe,  for  it  hath  no  Sign  of  a  back  Toe  ;  the  Figure  ex- 
prefies  a  Claw  on  each  Foot ;  the  outer  Sides  of  all  the  Toes  are  webb’d,  as  in  the  Albatrofs. 

This  Bird  was  lent  me  to  draw  by  Mr.  Benjamin  Cowel ;  it  came  with  the  Albatrofs  by  an  India 
Ship,  fo  that  I  am  of  Opinion  it  is  from  the  Seas  about  the  Cape  of  Good  Hope :  I  could  not 
gather  any  more  certain  Account  of  its  Place.  In  looking  over  a  ftnall  Traft  entitled,  a  Voyage 
to  St.  Kilda,  the  moft  remote  of  all  the  Weftern  Hands  of  Scotland.,  by  M.  Martin.,  Gent. 
London  1698,  I  find  the  Figure  of  a  Bird  agreeing  exadlly  with  this  in  the  Shape  of  its  Bill,  and 
the  back  Claw  is  very  juftly  exprefled  in  the  Print,  tho*  the  Defcription  calls  it  a  back  Toe  ;  k 
feems  to  be  of  the  fame,  or  very  near  the  Size  of  the  Bird  here  defcribed,  but  of  different  Co¬ 
lours  ;  it  being  greyifh  White  on  the  upper,  and  purely  White  on  the  under  Side :  But  what 
confirms  me  moft  that  thefe  two  Birds  are  of  the  fame  Tribe  or  Family,  is  the  Opinion  of  Dr. 
James  Monroe,  Fellow  of  the  College  of  Phyfician',  and  Phyfician  of  Bethlem  Hofpital,  who, 
happening  to  fee  my  Drawing,  faid  he  remembered  a  Bird  in  the  Voyage  to  St.  Kilda,  called 
the  Fulmar,  that  agreed  with  mine  ;  and  told  me,  at  the  fame  Time,  he  had  feen  the  Fulmar,  and 
drew  the  Figure  of  it  for  the  Plate  in  the  Book  when  he  was  a  young  Lad.  See  the  Figure  and 
Defcription  of  the  Fulmar  in  the  Voyage  to  St.  Kilda,  Pa.  55,  where  the  Author  fays,  “  he 
picks  his  Food  out  of  the  Backs  of  living  Whales.”  This  Manner  of  Feeding  may  fliew  us  that 
Nature  hath  fitted  every  Animal  according  to  his  appointed  Way  of  Life  ;  lor  the  hooked  Bill 
muft  be  moft  commodious  to  take  out  the  flimy  Subftance  that  gathers  and  is  lodged  in  the 
Fifia’s  Skin  ;  and  the  Claw  or  Spur  on  the  Heel,  which  is  placed  very  low,  may  he  defigned 
to  give  the  Bird  a  more  firm  Standing,  to  feed  on  the  flippery  Side  or  Back  of  a  Filk,  without 
which  the  Bird  might  be  blown  from  her  Place,  becaufe  there  generally  prevails  a  pretty  ftrong 
Wind  in  the  open  Sea  :  But  I  fhall  always  fubmit  fuch  Opinions  and  Reafonings  to  the  Expe¬ 
rience  of  the  more  knowing.  I  believe  this  Bird  hath  never  been  defcribed. 


L 


The 


(  90  ) 


The  white  and  black  Spotted  P  e  t  e  rt  e,  and  the  little  P  e  t  e  r  i  l, 

TH  E  firfl:  is  a  Sea  Fowl  of  the  Shape  and  Genus  of’  the  laft  defcribed,  having  all  the  fame. 
Charafteriftick  Notes :  It  is  about  the  Size  of  a  common  tame  Pigeon. 

The  Bill  is  Black,  having  the  Noftrils  in  Pipes  running  along  the  upper  Part  of  the  Bill,  and" 
opening  forward ;  it  hath  alfo  an  oblique  double  Channel  running  the  whole  Length  of  the  upper 
Mandible  on  each  Side ;  the  under  .Part  of  the  Bill  doth  not  bend  downward,  as  in  the  laft  de¬ 
fcribed,  but  hath  a  Knob  or  Angle  on  the  lower  Side  near  the  Point  •,  all  which  fee  exprefled  in 
the  Figure.  The  Head  and  under  .Side  of  the  Neck  is  Black,  having  a  white  Spot  confuledly 
intermixed  with  the  Black  on  each  Side  of  the  Neck ;  the  Back  and  leffer  covert  Feathers  of  the 
Wings  are  White,  pretty  regularly  fpotted  with  Black,  as  is  the  Rump  and  covert  Feathers  of 
the  Tail:  The  Tail  is.  wholly  Black  ■  fome  of  the  prime  Quills  are  Black  j  but  the  inner 
Quills  which  are  next:  the  Back  have  their  Tips  Black,  and  their  Bottoms  White  ;  the  firft  Row 
of  covert  Feathers  next  above  the  Quills  have  all  their  Tips  Black,  which  make  a  black  Bar  a- 
crofs  the  Wingi  .the  Wings  are  verged  all  round  with  Black,  from  the  Joints  to  the  Tips,,  which 
extend  beyond  the  Tail*,  the  whole  under  Side  is  White  from  the  Bill  to  the  covert  Feathers  un-, 
der  the  Tail  j  the  Throat,  Bfeaft,  and  covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  having  a  few  black  Spots 
drawn  Jong- ways  *,  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  like  thofe  of  the  laft  defcrib’d,  .  having  the  Claw  or 
Spur  on -the  Heel  %  but  in  this  I  perceived  no  Webs  on  the  Outfides  of  the  outer  Toes,  as  in  the 
foregoing^.tho’  it  is  webbed  on  the  Infides  of  the  inner  Toes  j  the  LegSg  .,  Feet,  ,and  Claws,  are 
all  of  a  Blickifh  or  Dufky  Colour. 

I  flialljoin  with  this  the  little  Peteril^  which  is  about  the  Size  of  a  '  .being  of  a  Dusky  or 
Black  .Colour  all  over,  except  the  Rump,  which  is  White.  The  flying  Figure  fhews  the 
Bird,  and  the  Pedeftal  Stone  has  an  out  Line  of  the  Head  and  Bill,  of  the  Size  of  Nature,  en¬ 
graved  on  it.  It  is  fo  very  like  the  great  black  Pr/m7, '  except  the  white  Rump,  that  a  Pi(5fure  of 
the  lejfer  might pafs  for  i\\& greater  in  Miniature:  :The  Bill  and  Feet  are  black,  having  Noftrils 
and  Spurs  like  the  two  laft  defcribed. 

The  black  and  ‘white  Peteril  was  given  me  by  my  worthy  Friend  James  Theobald,  Efq;  of 
Lambeth',  he  fays  it  was  brought  from  the  Cape  of  Good  Hofe,  where  it  is  called  the  Pantado,  . 
which  is  a  Name  the  Portuguefe  have  given  to  other  Birds,  of  a  very  different  Nature,  where  they 
find  them  fpotted  or  painted,  as  the  Name  denotes. 

'Of  the  Wiilt'dPeteril,  .above  defcribed,  I  have  feen  a  great  many  together,  in  the  Midft  of  the 
moremorthern  and  widcft  Pa:rtof.the  German  Ocean,  where  they  muft  have  been  more  than  too 
Englijh  Miles  from  Land  :  It  is  ftrange  tliat  fo  fmall  a  Bird  fhould  be  able  to  fubfift  in  fuch  open  Seas, 
where  they  cannot  reft  but  on  the  Water,  which  always  is  pretty  rough.  Thofe  I  have  feen  , 
were  continually  on  the  Wing  ihey  appear  not  but  in  tempeftuous  Weather  near  Ships,  or  Land, 
Thefe  1  law  flcreen’d  themfelves  out  of  the  Wind  under  the  Stern  of  the  Ship  I  was  aboard  of. 
They  even  feek.  Shelter  fometimes  in  the  deepeft  Hollows  that  are  formed  between  the  high  Waves 
of  the.Sea,  and  wonderfully  keep  their  Stations  there,  though  the  Waves  run  very  fwifcly  •,  they 
flutter  fo.-near  the  Surface  of  the  Water  that  they  feem  to  walk  on  it,  for  v/hich  Reafon  Mr.  Albin 
fays  they  are  call’d  Peterils,  becaufe  they  imitate  walking  on  the  Sea. 

Mr.  Albin  has  defcrib’d  this  laft  Bird,  and  has  inferred  its  Manner  of  Flight,  and  flieltering 
itfelf  in  Storms  at  Sea  ;  he  has  taken  no  Notice  of  its  remarkable  Spur  behind  the  Heel,  but  has 
given  his  Figure  a  fmall  backToe,  with  a  Claw  on  it,  which  is  contrary  to  its  Nature.  I  believe 
this  Tribe  of  Birds  all  reft  and  feed  on  the  Backs  of  living  or  dead  Fifhes  that  float  on  the  Sea, 
?vlr.  Willoughby,  in  the  Appendix  to  his  Ornithology,  .P.  395.  has  brief  Defcriptions  of  two  or 
three  Sorts  of  Birds,  that  feem  to  me  to  be  of  the  fame  Genus  with  thefe  above  delcribed  ;  one  of 
them  is  called  tht  .  Storm  Finck,  which  is,  J  think,  .a  proper  general  Name  for  the  whole  Tribe, 

T&e 


(  91  ) 

The  fmall  Black  and  White  Divers. 

TH  E  Bird  is  here  reprefented  of  its  natural  Size,  Handing  on  a  Rock.  Willough¬ 
by  hath  defcrihed  it  from  a  Picture  as  well  as  he  could,  but  has  ranged  it  with  a 
Genus  to  which  it  doth  not  belong  :  It  is  of  that  Tribe  of  whole-footed  Sea-Birds  which 
want  the  back  Toe.  The  original  Drawing  from  whence  Willoughby  made  his  De- 
fcription  was  Sir  Thomas  Brown's^  and  is  now  in  the  Colleftion  of  Sir  Hans  Shane  y  he 
calls  it  Mergulus  Melanoleucos  rojiro  acuto  brevi. 

The  Bill  is  Black  and  round,  being  equal  in  Height  and  Width)  the  Top  and  Sides 
of  the  Head,  whole  upper  Side,  Neck,  Back,  Wings,  and  Tail,  is  of  a  Black  or  Dulky^ 
Colour.  The  Qmlls  next  the  Body  are  tipped  with  White,  which  form  an  oblique 
Bar  of  White  acrofs  the  Wing  when  it  is  clofed  j  the  Infide  of  the  Wing  is  of  a 
brownifh  Afli-colour  ;  the  Throat  is  White,  which  Whitenefs  terminates  brokenly  on 
each  Side  about  the  Place  of  the  Ears-j  the  fore  Part  of  the  Neck  is  of  a  Grey,  or  Aih- 
Golour,  pretty  dark,  growing  gradually  lighter  on  theBreaft;  the  Belly,  Sides  under 
the  Wings,  and  Coverts  under  the  Tail,  are  White  j  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  dirty 
Flelh-colour the  Webs  between  the  Toes  Black  j  it  wants  the  back  Toe,  having  only 
three,  all  Handing  forward,  armed  with  crooked  Claws  j  it  hath  no  Membranes,  or  la¬ 
teral  Websj  on  the  Infides  of  the  inner  Toes,  as  moH  web-footed  Birds  liave )  it  is 
bare  of  Feathers  a  very  little  above  the  Knees  :  I  fuppofe  this  to  be  the  Hen  Bird. 

The  upper  Bird  in  this  Plate,  reprefented  flying,  is  of  the  Size  of  the  laH  deferibed  : 
I  imagine  it  to  be  the. Cock  of  the  foregoing  j  the  Bill  is  Black,  Hiaped  as  in  the  former. 
The  whole  upper  Side  agrees  exadlly  with  that,  as  doth  the  Belly,  Sides,  and  Coverts 
under  the  Tail.  The  Infide  of  the  Wings  differs  from  the  other,  in  that  it  hath  a  Bar' 
of  dirty  White  acrofs  it  when  extended,  the  Coverts  of  the  Quills  being  of  that  Co¬ 
lour.;  the  Head  and  Neck  in  this  is  wholly  Black,  which  makes  the  greateH  Difference 
in  thefe  two  Birds ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are,  for  Colour  and  Shape,  the  very  fame  as  in 
the  formei% 

The  firH  of  thefe  Birds  I  drew  from  the  Bird  Huffed,  at  the  Virginia  Coffee-houfe, 
behind  the  Royal  Exchange,  London,  Anno  1742.  According  to  Sir  Thomas  Brown,  of 
Norwich,' %  Account,  they  are  very  fcarce  Birds,  and  are  found  on  the  Sea  CoaHs  (neareH 
Norwich  I  fuppofe  he  means)  two  of  them  being  brought  to  him  by  a  CoaHer.  See  its 
Defeription  and  Figure  in  ^z7/wi!^/6/^^’s  Ornithology.  P.  343.  Tab. 

The  fecond  Bird  I  found  hanging  in  the  Marlborough' s- He  ad  Alehoufe,  Fetticoat- 
Lane,  Lo?idon,  which  I  procured  to  draw,  and  then  return’d  it  to  the  fame  Place, 

1743..  Hlbin  has  aeferib’d  this  Bird,  and  call’d  it, the  Hen  Greenland.  Hove,  in  which 
he  was  miHaken,  and  this  MiHake  led  him  into  a  groffer  Error,  for  be’made  this  a  Mo-, 
del  for  his  Cock  Greenland  Dove,  without  fearching  after  Nature  *  His  Figure  is  not  un-. 
like,  except  the  Bill’s  being  a  good  deal  too  thick,  and  the  Legs.and  Feet  too  fmall.  The 
Alehoufe  People  could  not  tell  from  v/hence  this  came,  but  l  am  almoH.  Hire  that  they  ; 
muH  be  Male  and  Female  of  the  fame  Species,  from -.  their  great  Similitude  :  And  as 
Wilkughby’?,  Defeription  was  too  brief,  and  only  from  a. Picture,  and  ./7/7/;^’s  Figure  fome- 
thing  lame,  and  joined  as  Female  to  a  Male  of  which  -k  was  not  a  Species  ;  I  hope  my 
thus  placing  them  together  in  one  View,  with  Deferiptions  immediately  from  Nature, 
will  be  received  by  the  Curious  as  an  Amendment  to  what  has  hitherto  been  publifbed  ' 
concerning  thefe  Birds,  .  The 


(  92  ) 

'the  Pelican. 

rsn  HIS  Bird  ftemed  to  me  to  be  more  than  double  the  Bignels  of  the  largeft  Swan ;  it  mea- 

I  fured  from  the  Point  of  the  Bill  to  the  Angle  of  the  Mouth  20  Inches,  of  our  EngUJh  Mea- 
fure,  which  is  fix  Inches  more  than  any  Natural  Hiflorian  has  found  it;  the  Academy  of  Paris 
.'having  meafured  one  which  was  but  14  Inches,  Paris  Meafure  I  fuppofe;  and  our  Countryman, 
iVilloiighh}\  meafured  one  brought  from  Rujfia^  which  he  makes  14  Inches  EngUJh  \  fo  that  I  be- 
Jieve  this  Bird  of  mine  muft  be  proportionally  bigger  in  all  its  Parts  than  what  have  been  before 
de  ribed.  I  thought  it  fomething  incredible  \n  Willoughby’ '&  Defcription,  that  a  Man  fliould  put 
his  Head  into  the  Pouch  under  the  Bill,  till  I  faw  it  performed  in  this  Bird  by  its  Keeper,  and  am 
lure  a  fecond  Man’s  Head  might  have  been  put  in  with  it  at  the  fame  Time. 

The  upper  Mandible  is  ftraight  and  flat,  having  a  Ridge  running  along  its  Middle,  and  at  the 
■Point  a  l  emarkable  Hook  ;  the  Skin  round  the  Eye  is  bare  of  Feathers,  of  a  light  Flelh-colour,  as 
is  the  Bill’s  both  upper  and  lower  Mandibles,  except  the  upper  toward  the  Point,  which  is  of. a  yel¬ 
low  Green,  with  fome  Dalhes  of  a  dusky  Lead-colour  -,  the  Noftrils  are  not  perceivable  ;  the  Eyes 
are  of  a  dark  Hazel-colour  the  lower  Part  of  the  Bill  is  compofed  of  two  flexible  Sides,  which  it 
can  open  pretty  wide,  or  draw  them  together  at  Pleafure,  joined  together  at  the  Point ;  thefe 
Sides  are  joined  the  whole  length  by  a  loofe  Skin  of  the  Confiftence  of  thin  Tripe,  of  a  Yellowilh 
Colour,  which  it  can  either  draw  upclofe  to  the  Bill,  or  let  fall  to  a  confiderable  Depth  from  it ; 
this  Skin  extends  itfclf  under  the  Throat ;  it  hath  rather  the  Appearance  of  the  Root  of  a  Tongue 
than  what  may  be  called  a  Tongue  ;  when  it  extends  its  Neck  it  appears  longer  in  Proportion  than 
reprefented  in  the  Figure,  and  fometimes  it  is  drawn  in  fliorter:  At  firfb  Sight  it  feems  to  be  a 
white  Bird  ;  it  hath  loole  Feathers  on  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  in  Form  of  a  Creft ;  the  whole 
Head,  Neck,  all  the  under  Side,  and  covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings,  are  White  ; 
the  Quills,  or  prime  Feathers  of  the  Wings,  are  Black  ;  the  firft  Row  of  covert  Feathers  next 
above  them  of  a  greyifh  Brown;  the  Remainder  of  a  lighter  Greyifh  Colour,  intermixed  with 
White ;  the  Back  and  Tail  are  of  a  lightilh  Grey-colour  ;  between  the  Back  and  Wing  a  little  in¬ 
clining  to  Reddilh  Colour,  and  fpotted  with  Black  :  The  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  purplifli  Flefh- 
coloLir;  the  Webs  between  the  Toes  of  a  lightifh  Lead- colour ;  it  hath  four  Toes,  all  webbed 
together,  as  in  the  Soland  Goofe  and  Cormerant\  the  two  inner  Toes  incline  backward,  but  do  not 
Hand  fo  dircdfly  back  as  in  Birds  that  have  them  loofe ;  the  Claws  are  of  a  Brownilh  Colour. 

This  Bird  was  brought  from  the  Cape  ol  Good  Hope  by  Captain  Pelly^  in  the  India  Company’s 
Service,  Anno  1 745.  who  obliged  me  with  a  Sight  of  it  before  it  was  expofed  m  London.  I  find  no 
material  Difference  between  this,  and  what  has  been  dcfcribed  by  Willoughby.^  and  the  Academy 
ol Paris,  (except  its  Sizej  fo  that  I  cannot  pronounce  it  fpecifically  different  from  what  has  been 
defcribed  before.  The  Academy  of  Paris  think  the  Bird  they  have  defcribed  is  the  Pelican  of  Ari- 
Jlotle  and  the  Onocrotalus  of  Pliny  ;  they  are  alfo  confirmed  in  the  Opinion  that  this  is  a  long-lived 
Bird  ;  for,  out  of  a  great  Number  kept  at  Verfailles,  none  had  died  for  more  than  twelve  Years, 
being  the  only  Animals  kept  in  Managery,  of  v/hich  fome  have  not  died  in  that  Time::  The 
Wings, -when  extended,  meafured  eleven  Feet,  {Paris  Meafure  I  fuppofej.  The  Curious,  who  defire 
to  examine  into  the  Anatomy  of  this  Bird  may  confult  Mem.  de  I’Academie  Royale  des  Sciences,  depuis 
1-666.  jufqtf  a  i6^g.  Tom.  3.  troifieme  Partie,  p.  186.  Mr.  Willoughby  has  alfo  oollefted  the 
Accounts  of  former  Authors,  and  given  a  Defcription  himfelf  of  this  Bird  in  .his .Ornithology, 
p.  32r7.,/ii(5'..  63.  See  alfo  Z.^5ri^«’s  Travels  into  Perfia,  &c.  mol.  2.  p.  167.  where  he 

calls  fit  Bdbe.  The  Pelican  feems  to  inhabit  the  greateft  Part  of  the  Old  World,  it  being 
fQu.ndin  many  Climates  both  far  North  and  South,  as  well  as  the  intermediate  Latitudes  ;  it  being 
pretty  common  in  Rijfta,  abounding  in  Egypt,  and  fometimes  found  at  the  Cape  oPGood  Hope, 
:.which  Country  feems,  by  the  above  defcribed  Bird,  to  breed  them  larger  than  any  other  Place. 
.As  no  Author  hath  given  a  tolerab  e  Figure  of  this  Bird,  my  Hiflory  in  that  Refped  will 

be  new,  as  well  as  in  its  extraordinary  Magnitude*  which  all  jche  Curious  in  this  City  are 
Witnefles  of,  it  having  been  publickly  fhewn  here.  -Xbo 


-x- 


(  93  ) 

ne  Pelican  of  America. 

TH  E  Body  of  this  Bird  (as  it  appeared  to  me  when  fluffed  and  dried)  was  fomething 
bigger  than  that  of  a  large  tame  Goofe  ;  from  the  Point  of  the  Bill  to  the  Angles  of  the 
Mouth  it  meafured  13  Inches  ;  the  Wing  when  clofed  meafured  18  Inches.  I  take  this  Bird  to 
fall  fhort  of  half  the  (^lantity  or  Bulk  of  the  lafl  defcribed,  this  appearing  to  me  lefs  than  a 
Swan,  and  that  manifeftly  more  than  double  its  Bulk. 

The  upper  Mandible  of  the  Bill  is  narrower  in  the  Middle  than  it  is  at  either  End,  and  is  re¬ 
ceived  into  the  lower,  except  towards  the  Point,  v/hich  widens  and  receives  the  lower  into  it ; 
the  Bill  is  Red  toward  the  Point,  both  upper  and  under  Parts,  and  Yellow  next  the  Head  •,  the 
Eye  is  placed  in  a  Space  which  has  no  Feathers,  of  a  Brown-colour,  which  I  imagine  might  be 
Flefh-colour  when  the  Bird  was  living,  it  being  fo  in  the  living  Pelican  lafl  treated  of ;  It  hath  a 
brown  Hook  at  the  Point  of  the  upper  Bill,  which  is  received  into  a  Cavity  in  the  under,  as  ex- 
preffed  in  the  Figure  ;  the  Noftrils  are  not  vifible.  The  Pouch,  when  dry,  appeared  of  the  Con- 
fiflence  and  Colour  of  a  blown  dry  Ox’s  Bladder,  having  Fibres  running  its  whole  Length,  and 
Blood-veffels  croffmg  them,  which  proceeded  from  the  Sides  of  the  lower  Part  of  the  Bill, 
which  opened  into  this  Pouch  its  whole  L.ength  ;  the  whole  Head  and  Neck  were  covered  with 
white  Feathers,  thofe  on  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  hanging  a  little  longer  than  the  others  ;  the 
White  in  the  hind  Part  of  the  Neck  ended  in  a  Peak  almoft  in  the  Middle  of  the  Back;  the  Back 
is  covered  with  fmall  Feathers,  which  are  White  down  their  Shafts,  and  of  a  dusky-black  Ada- 
colour  on  their  Sides,  all  ending  in  Points  :  The  Tail  is  afla-colour’d,  of  a  middling  Shade  •,  the 
great  Feathers  or  Quills  of  the  Wings  are  Black  ;  the  covert  Feathers  next  above  them  are  afh- 
coloured,  both  on  the  upper  and  under  Sides  of  the  Wings  ;  the  lefler  Coverts  ot  the  Wings, 
both  on  the  upper  and  under  Sides,  are  White  in  their  Middles,  and  edged  with  Afh-colour  on 
their  Sides,  as  on  the  Back,  and  fomething  pointed  *,  the  Quills  within  Side  are  of  a  dirty  Afli- 
colour  ;  The  greater  Bone  of  the  Wing  being  broken,  I  found  it  to  be  very  light,  hollow,  quite 
void  of  Marrow,  and  the  Sides  of  it  as  thin  as  Parchment :  The  Breafl,  Belly,  Sides  under  the 
Wings,  that  is  the  whole  under  Side,  is  of  a  dark  Afh-colour,  approaching  to  Black,  without 
the  Mixture  of  any  lighter  Colour  :  The  Legs  are  fhort ;  it  hath  four  Toes,  all  webb’d  together 
as  in  the  former  ;  the  middle,  or  longeft  Toe,  longer  than  the  Leg;  both  Legs  and  Feet  are  of 
a  dirty  yellow  Green ifh-colour  ;  the  Claws  dusky. 

This  Bird  was  brought  from  the  Wefi-Indies,  and  prefented  to  me  by  my  honour’d  Friend,' 
James  fheohald,  Efq.  Tho’  this  Bird,  and  the  lafl  defcribed,  agree  pretty  well  in  Figure  and  Pro¬ 
portion,  yet  they  differ  vaflly  in  Magnitude,  and  in  Colour  ;  the  firfl  may  not  very  improperly 
be  called  a  white  Bird  ;  this  muff  be  called  a  dark  Grey,  with  a  white  Head  ;  and,  if  we  con- 
fider  the  Diflance  of  their  Habitations,  I  think  all  thefe  Circumflances  feem  to  favour  an  Opinion 
of  their  being  fpecifically  different  from  each  other.  For  farther  Satisfadlion  I  fhall  add  what  Sir 
Hans  Sloane  hiLS  obferved  of  this  Bird,  fee  his  Natural  Hiftory  of  ^■3XC\i\Q2.,  Vol.  II.  Pag.  322. 

This  feems  to  be  the  fame  with  the  Pnoite  Pelican,  only  of  a  darker  Colour  ;  they  are  frequent 
“  in  all  the  Seas  of  the  hot  Weji-Indies  ;  they  fifh  after  the  fame  Manner  as  Man-of-lVar  Birds, 
“  and  come  into  the  fheltered  Bays  in  flormy  Weather,  where  they  very  often  perch  on  Trees  ; 
“  they  fly  over  the  Sea  as  Gulls,  and  take  the  Fifli  when  they  fpy  them,  by  falling  down  upon 
them,  and  they  then  rife  again  and  do  the  like  :  They  are  not  reckon’d  good  Food.  When 
“  they  are  feen  at  Sea  it  is  a  Sign  of  being  near  Land.” — Wafer,  in  his  Voyage  and  Defcription 
of  the  Iflhmus  of  America,  fays,  “  The  Pelican  is  not  found  on  the  South-Sea  Side  of  the  Ifth- 
“  mus,  but  they  abound  in  the  Wefi-Indies,  on  the  Northern  Side  ;  that  they  are  of  a  dark  Grey- 
“  colour,  and  under  the  Throat  hangs  a  Bag  ;  that  the  old  Ones  are  not  eaten,  but  when  young 
“  they  are  good  Meat.”  More  is  added  by  Wafer,  which  the  Curious  may  examine  in  the  fore- 
mention’d  Voyage,  Pag.  1 19  and  120.  A  great  Number  of  other  Voyagers  feem  to  have  men¬ 
tioned  this  Bird  by  various  Names,  but  I  find  no  Figure  of  him  in  any  of  them,  nor  fo  full  a 
Defcription  as  the  above  ;  fo  that  I  hope  my  Labour  will  not  be  efteemed  lofl. 

The  two  Sorts  of  Corals  which  decorate  the  ground  Work  of  the  Plate,  are  defigned  from 
Nature,  the  greater  Brown,  the  lefler  Red. 

M  Phe 


4 


(  9+  ) 

The  Black-Footed  Penguins. 

These  Birds  appeared  to  me  about  the  Size  of  tame  Geefe  •,  I  have  called  them  Black- 
Footed^  to  diftinguifh  them  from  one  defcribed  in  this  Book  with  red  Feet,  and  a  red  Bill, 
of  a' different  Form  from  the  Bills  of  thefe,  which  I  have  called  fimply  the  Penguin.  See  its  Fh 
gure  and  Defcription,  fag.  49.  In  this  Plate  I  have  added  the  Bill  of  that  figur’d  Plate  49,  to¬ 
gether  with  a  Bill  of  thefe,  both  of  their  natural  Size,  they  being  a  good  deal  different,  which 
1  think  fully  proves  them  to  be  of  two  diftindt  Species  •,  the  Legs  are  placed  very  backward. 

The  Bill  of  the  fronting  Figure  is  Black,  hooked  at  the  Point  of  the  upper  Chop,  and  feem- 
ing  to  be  cut  off  at  the  Point  of  the  lower,  into  which  Cleft  the  over-hanging  Part  of  the  upper 
falls  j  it  is  fomething  comprefled  fideways  and  furrow’d  ^  the  Noftrils  are  placed  at  equal  Dif- 
tances  between  the  Bafis  and  Point  ^  toward  the  Point  it  is  croffed  with  a  yellowifh  Stripe  or  Bar : 
The  Throat,  and  Sides  of  the  Head,  are  of  a  dirty  Brown-colour,  in  which  the  Eyes  are  placed ; 
from  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill  above  the  Eyes,  on  each  Side  of  the  Head,  pafles  a  broad  white  Line, 
which  joins  itfelf  to  the  White  on  the  Sides  and  under  Side  of  the  Neck:  The  Top  of  the 
Flead,  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back,  and  upper  Part  of  the  Wings,  are  of  a  dark  Brown-co¬ 
lour  ;  the  under  Side,  Neck,  Breaft,  and  Belly,  are  White,  excepting  a  Line  of  Brown  that 
paffes  over  the  Breaft,  and  reaches  on  each  Side  as  far  as  the  Legs,  as  exprefled  in  the  Figure  : 
It  is  White  on  the  Rump  *,  the  Infides  of  the  Wings  are  Brown,  variegated  with  fome  White 
and  Black  *,  all  the  Brown  Parts  are  a  little  fported  with  Dusky  or  Black  j  it  hath  little  Signs  of  a 
Tail,  there  appearing  only  a  few  Ihort  Briftles  ;  the  Feathers  on  the  upper  Part  are  hard  and 
very  clofe  •,  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  Black-colour  •,  the  Toes  arm’d  with  ftrong  Claws,  three 
of  which  are  webb’d  together,  and  the  fourth  is  very  fmall  and  loofe,  which  Hands  forward  ra¬ 
ther  than  backward  ;  the  inner  of  the  three  greater  Toes  hath  a  lateral  Web  •,  the  Feet  are  thick 
and  clumfy.  I  have  not  obferved  the  Pofition  of  the  fmall  Toe  in  any  other  Fowl  anfwer 
to  this.  Another  of  thefe  Birds  that  came  with  this  was  blacker  in  its  dark  Parts,  but  otherwife 
the  fame. 

The  other  Figure  Handing  fideways  had  the  Bill  and  Feet  ffiaped  and  coloured  as  the  above  *, 
the  FIcad,  Neck,  Back,  and  Wings,  dusky,  yet  fomething  light  on  the  Throat  and  above  the 
Eyes  *,  the  Breaft  and  Belly  wholly  White,  wanting  the  Wreath  or  Stripe  which  furrounds  the  un¬ 
der  Side  of  the  former  :  This  had  a  fmall  Verge  of  White  on  the  Points  of  the  Place  of  Quills  in 
other  Fowls  ;  the  Wings  in  both  were  flat,  hard,  and  very  little  in  Proportion,  covered  with 
Feathers  fo  very  fmall  and  ftiff,  that  they  appeared  to  be  Shagreen  :  I  drew  one  of  the  largcft 
Quills,  which  fee  figur’d  as  big  as  Nature  on  the  Side  of  the  Plate  •,  I  counted  more  than  a  hun¬ 
dred  of  thefe  in  the  firft  Row. 

The  firft  of  thefe  Birds  was  lent  me  by  Mr.  Cowell.,  and  the  other  by  Mr.  Holms  ;  they  could 
not  fay  diredlly  from  whence  they  were  brought,  but,  as  they  came  by  Eqfi- India  Ships,  I  fup- 
pofe  they  are  from  the  Cape  of  Good  Hope,  and  it  may  be  that  figur’d  Page  49  is  the  Mega- 
lenic  Goofe.  Thefe  Southern  Birds  differ  widely  from  the  Northern  Penguin  delcribed  by  Wil¬ 
loughby,  Pag.  322,  that  having  a  more  perfed  Wing  •,  the  Quill  of  one  of  them  I  have  pluck’d 
out  meafured  three  Inches  and  a  half ;  it  hath  a  more  perfed  Tail,  and  wants  the  fourth  Toe. 
See  a  farther  Account  of  the  Northern  Penguin  in  the  Hiftory  of  the  Hands  of  Foe-roe,  Pag.  141. 
engliflred  from  the  Danijh  Language,  in  which  it  is  called  Garfugel ;  the  Author  fuppoies  it  to 
be  like  the  Penguin  found  in  Terra  del  Fugo,  painted  and  defcribed  in  Atlas  minor  mercatoris. 
The  Coralline  Subftance  here  figured  as  a  Decoration,  in  the  Form  of  Bells,  is  after  Nature,  of 
its  natural  Size  j  it  is  of  a  White-colour  j  but  what  Part  of  the  World  produced  it  I  cannot  tell. 

Tihe 


■n. 


V" 


ijse 


t 


:: 


! 


\- 


f  95  } 

The  Red-Breasted  Goosander. 

This  Bird  is  of  a  middle  Size,  between  a  Duck  and  Goofe  :  I  find  one  of  them 
figured  in  fmall  by  Robert  Cobinef^  Painter  to  Lewis  the  1 4th  of  France,  which  he 
calls  Merghanfer  Cyrrhatus,  in  a  Set  of  Prints  by  him  publiflied.  It  differs  from  our; 
Goofander  defcribed  by  Willoughby,  />•  335«  in  that  it  hath  a  red  Bread:.  Mr.  Albin,  in 
his  Hiftory  of  Birds,  w/.  2.  p.  90*  has  figured  a  Bird  which  feems  to  me  to  be  taken 
from  the  American  Goofander,  though  his  Defcription  is  lamely  tranfcribed  firom  Wil¬ 
loughby,  only  with  the  Addition  of  a  red  Breaft,  which  the  Englijh  Goofander  hath  not. 
My  Defcription  is  as  follows : 

The  Bill  is  near  three  Inches  and  a  Qiwrter  long  from  the  Tip  to  the  Angles  of  the 
Mouth,  flraight  and  narrow,  or  compreffed  fideways,  contrary  to  thofe  of  Ducks  j  the  up¬ 
per  Part  hooked  at.  the  End  ;  both  upper  and  under  toothed  their  whole  Lengths  y  the 
upper  Part  Red,  clouded  with  a  Dufky-Colour  >  the  lower  Part  of  a  brighter  Red  :  The- 
whole  Head  is  Black,  which  refleds  a  fhining  green  Glofs^  the  Feathers  behind  the 
Head  are  loofe,  and  longer  than  the  other  Feathers ;  the  Neck  for  fome  Space  is  White,, 
yet  juft  behind  there  is  a  black  Line  which  goes  from  the  Head  to  the  Back  j  the  lower 
Part  of  the  Neck,  and  the  Breaft,  is  of  a  brownifti  Orange-colour,  with  black  Spots 
along  the  Shafts  of  the  Feathers  :  On  each  Side,  at  the  bottom  of  the  Neck,  or  begin¬ 
ning  of  the  Breaft,  is  a  remarkable  Spot,  compofed  of  white  Feathers,  bordered  with 
Black :  The  Back  is  firft  Black ;  the  hind  Part  and  Rump  of  an  Afh-colour, 
finely  painted  with  tranfverfe  Lines  ofDufky:  The  Tail  is  of  a  very  dirty  Brown  j 
from  the  Shoulders  proceed  white  Feathers  on  each  Side,  which  fall  between  the  Back 
and  Wings :  The  Qmlls  are  Black  for  the  firft  ten ;  the  three  next  have  their  outer 
Webs  Black,  and  their  inner  White;  the  fix  following  are  White,  except  their  Bot¬ 
toms  ;  the  next  four  are  White,  with  their  outer  Webs  finely  edged  with  Black  almoft 
to  their  Tips ;  the  three  innermoft  next  the  Back  are  wholly  Black  ;  the  Coverts  next 
above  the  Qmlls  are  firft  Black  over  the  black  or  greater  Quills,  the  reft  have  black 
Bottoms  and  white  Tips,  and  thefe  cover  the  Quills  of  the  fame  Colour ;  above  thefe 
there  is  a  Part  of  the  lefiTer  Coverts  of  the  Wing  White  ;  yet  the  whole  Wing,  when 
clofed,  is  encompafied  with  a  Border  of  dufky  or  blackifti  Feathers,  except  the  very 
Ridge  about  the  Joint,  which  is  White  ;  the  Covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings 
are  alfo  White ;  the  Belly,  Thighs,  Sides,  and  Coverts  under  the  Tail,  are  White, 
clouded  a  little  with  Cream  Colour ;  the  Sides  under  the  Wings  are  variegated  with  fine 
tranfverfe  Lines  of  a  Dufky  Colour  ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  much  like  thofe  of  Ducks  ; 
the  fmall  Toe  behind,  and  the  inner  Sides  of  the  inner  Toes  on  each  Foot,  have  lateral 
Fins,  or  Webs;  both  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  Red-colour,  pretty  bright;  the  Claws  are 
Black. 

This  Bird  was  brought  from  Newfoundland,  where  it  Vv^as  taken  at  Sea  on  the  Fiftiing. 
Banks,  as  I  am  informed  by  my  obliging  Friend,  George  Holms,  Efq;  who  prefentedme 
with  this  Bird  well  preferved.  I  believe  that  no  Defcription  hath  been  hitherto  given 
of  this  Bird,  nor  any  perfect  Figure,  except  Roberts's,  ^which  exprefies  the  white  Spots 
on  the  Sides  of  the  Neck ;  which  Albin  hath  not  either  figured  or  defcribed  in  his. 
Mr.  Willoughby,  on  opening  the  Stomach  of  the  European  Goofander,.  found  it  to  feed 
on  Fifh. 


{  96  ) 

l~'he  Black  Whit E  Dobchick,  and  the  Eared  Dobchick. 
^’""1^  H  E  firft  of  thefe  Birds,  reprefented  by  the  Front  Figure  in  the  Print,  is  about 
the  Bignefs  of  a  Teal :  Its  Bill,  from  the  Point  to  the  Angles  of  the  Mouth, 
is  an  Inch  and  a  Qmirter  long  ;  the  Wing,  when  clofed,  is  five  Inches  and  a  Qi^arten 
This  I  call  the  black  white  Dobchick  :  The  other,  reprefented  fwimming,  is  lefs  than 
the  firfi:,  yet  it  fomething  exceeds  the  common  dccid  fmalleji  Dobchick-,  its  Bill,  from  the 
Point  to  the  Angle  of  the  Mouth,  meafures  a  little  above  an  Inch;  the  Wing,  when 
clofed,  was  four  Inches  three  Quarters  long  :  This  I  have  called  the  eared  Dobchick. 

The  black  and  white  Dobchick  hath  the  Bill  ftraight  and  fliarp  at  the  Point,  of  a  Black 
Colour,  except  the  Edges  of  the  upper  Mandible  next  the  Head,  and  the  Root  or  Bafis 
of  the  lower,  w'bich  are  Red ;  the  Circle  round  the  Eye  is  of  a  bright  Red-colour ; 
there  is  a  bare  Skin  pafies  from  the  Side  of  the  upper  Bill  to  the  Eye  of  a  fine  deep  Red- 
colour,  and  above  the  Skin  on  each  Side  a  white  Spot ;  the  Top  of  the  Head  is  Black, 
with  a  greenifli  Glofs,  but,  not  very  bright:  The  upper  Side  of  the  Neck,  Back, 
Rump,  and  Wings,  are  of  a  pretty  deep  Black,  yet  the  Wings  are  edged  with  White, 
about  the  Ridge  or  Joint,  and  the  Tips  of  the  middle  Quills  are  White,  which  form  a 
white  Bar  acrofs  the  Wing  ;  the  covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings  are  White  ; 
it  hath  no  Appearance  of  a  Tail ;  the  under  Side  of  the  Head  and  Neck  is  White,  as 
is  the  whole  Belly  and  Sides  under  the  Wings,  tho’  the  lower  Belly  about  the  fetting 
on  of  the  Legs  is  fpotted  with  Black  ;  the  Legs  are  placed  at  the  very  Extremity  of  the 
Body,  fo  that  it  cannot  ftand  but  in  an  ered:  Poffure  ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  pur- 
plifh  Flefh-colour  within,  and  a  dirty  Green  without  Side  ;  it  hath  four  Toes  fianding  in 
the  ufual  Manner,  all  disjoined,  yet  have  they  lateral  Fins  on  each  Side  of  them  all,  ex¬ 
cept  the  little  hind  Toe,  which  has  only  a  fingle  Fin  beneath  it;  it  hath  broad  flat  Claws 
like  Imman  Nails;  the  Legs  are  very  flat  one  Way,  and  broad  another,  as  the  ffand- 
ing  of  the  Figure  is  calculated  to  exprefs;  the  hind  Part  of  the  Leg  is  toothed  like  a  Saw; 
the  Toes  are  fo  formed  with  their  Webs  to  fhut  up  like  a  Fan,  that  they  may  be  drawn 
with  Eafe  through  the  Water,  and  open  again  when  the  Bird  ftrikes  :  The  Graving 
in  the  Legs  and  Feet  particularly  exprefs  the  Scaling  in  all  their  Divifions. 

The  Dared  Dobchick  hath  the  Bill  ftraight  and  fliarp-pointed,  of  a  Black  Colour,  ex¬ 
cept  the  Tip  of  the  lower  Mandible,  which  is  Whitifh  ;  thtirides  of  the  Eyes  are  Red  ; 
from  behind  the  Eyes  on  each  Side  proceeds  a  Tuft  of  loofe  long  Feathers,  of  a  reddifli 
Yellow-colour,  which  either  lie  on  the  Sides  of  the  Neck,  or  with  the  Motion  of  the 
Bird  flow  backward,  as  expreflbd  in  the  Figure:  The  Head  and  Neck  are  Black,  yet  in 
the  Throat  a  few  white  Spots  are  intermixed ;  the  whole  upper  Side  is  of  a  blackifh 
Brown,  except  the  Ridge  of  the  Wing  about  the  Joint  and  the  Tips  of  the  middle  Quills, 
which  are  White,  as  in  the  above  defcribed ;  the  inner  Coverts  are  alfo  White,  as  alfo 
the  Breafl  and  Belly  :  Where  the  Dark  on  the  upper  Side,  and  the  White  on  the  low¬ 
er,  join,  there  is  intermixed  and  broken  into  each  Colour,  the  whole  Length  of  the 
Bird,  a  reddifh  Yellow-colour ;  it  is  tailles-,  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  formed  like  the  above, 
but  the  dirty  Green-colour  prevails  more  in  this. 

Of  the  firfi;  defcribed  of  thefe  Birds  I  found  feveral  in  the  Markets  of  London^  in  the 
hard  Winter,  1739,  having  never  feen  or  heard  of  it  till  then.  The  fecond  was  taken  a- 
bout  the  large  Ponds  at  Ha}?ip/iead,  near  London^  and  fent  alive  to  Sir  Dans  Shane ^  who, 
when  it  died,  fent  it  to  me,  that  a  Draught  of  it  might  be  preferved.  I  had  both  thefe 
Birds  foon  after  they  were  dead,  before  the  Colour  of  their  Eyes  or  Feet  were  any  thing 
changed.  I  cannot  find  any  Defcriptions  that  agree  with  either  of  them.  The 


SI 


{  97  ^ 


^he  Red-Throated  Ducker  or  Loon. 

^  I  ^  HIS  Bird  is  about  the  Size  of  a  tame  Ducky  the  Bill,  from  the  Angle  of  the 

jL  Mouth  to  the  Tip,  is  three  Inches  and  a  Quarter  long,  and  cover’d  as  far  as  the' 
Noftrils  with  Ihort  Feathers. 

The  Bill  is  ftraight,  narrow,  Iharp  pointed,  and  of  a  Black-colour  j  the  Head  and  Sides 
of  the  Neck  are  of  a  blueifh  Afh-colourj  the  hind  Part  of  the  Neck  is  White,  fpotted^ 
with  black  Marks  drawn  downward  3  the  Throat,  or  fore  Part  of  the  Neck,  is  Red,  of 
the  Colour  of  dry’d  Blood  5  the  Back,  upper  Part  of  the  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  of  a 
dark  Afh-colour;  the  Qinll  Feathers  of  the  Wings  darker  than  the  others,  they  being 
almoll  Black;  fome  of  the  Middle  Quills  of  the  Wings  are  tipped  with  White  3  the 
Covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings  have  white  Dalhes  near  their  Tips  on  each  Side  their 
Shafts  3  the  Covert  Feathers  within  Side  of  the  Wings  are  White :  The  Bread,  Belly, 
Sides  under  the  Wings,  and  Covert  Feathers  under  the  Tail,  are  White  ;  the  Sides  of 
•  the  Bread  are  didindly  fpotted  with  Black  drawn  downward  3  and  the  Coverts  beneath 
the  Tail  are  fpotted  with  broader  and  more  confufed  Spots  of  Dulky  3  the  Legs  and  Feet 
are  of  a  Dulky  or  Blackifh  Colour,  yet  the  Toes  are  a  little  inclining  to  Fledi-co- 
lour  3  it  hath  three  Toes  danding  forward,  all  webbed  together  as  in  Ducks^  with  a  Fin¬ 
er  Web  running  along  the  Inlides  of  the  two  inner  Toes  3  it  hath  alfo  two  very  fmali 
hind  Toes,  with  Fins  on  their  lower  Sides  3  the  Claws  are  broad  and  flat,  like  human 
Nails  3  the  Legs  are  placed  almod  at  the  Extremity  of  the  Body,  and  are  very  flat. 

This  Bird  was  brought,  preferved  dry,  from  Greenland^  and  prefented  to  my  good 
Friend  Mr.  John  Warner,  Merchant,  in  Roiherhith,  who  finee  gave  it  to  me,  in 
Order  to  figure  and  deferibe  for  this  Hidory  :  It  differs  principally  in  the  Head  from  onc^ 
of  this  Tribe  found  in  England,  deferibed  by  Willoughby  in  his  Ornithology,  p.  341, 
that  having  no  Rednefs  on  the  Throat.  I  had  lately  brought  to  me  one  of  this  Genus 
of  Birds,  newly  taken  in  the  River  ‘Thames,  and  by  bending  the  Toes  forward  I  find, 
they  will  not  decline  above  forty  Degrees  from  the  Line  of  the  Leg,  whereas  to  make 
the  Leg  perpendicular  in  Walking,  it  ought  to  decline  ninety  Degrees ;  fo  1  take  the 
Report  of  their  walking  upright  to  be  a  Midake  3  for  if  the  Body  be  upright,  and  the 
Legs  not  fo,  the  Feet  mud  dand  out  before  the  Bird,  and  it  mud  fall  backward,  unlefs 
it  reds  on  the  Knees  or  Joints  of  the  Legs  behind,  v.’hich  is  not  natural,  fo  that  I 
imagine  it  mud  walk  in  a  half-ered;  Pofition,  as  I  have  drawn  its  Figure.  This  Bird^ 
hath  never  been  deferibed  to  my  Knowledge, 


^he  Great  Black  and  White  Duck 


This  Bird  is  one  of  the  largeft  of  the  Buck  Kind  ;  the  Bill  is  reprefented  of  its  natural 
Bignefs  in  the  lower  Part  of  the  Print.  I  take  it  to  be  the  Eider  or  [oft-feather'd  Buck  of 
TVormius,  and  the  St.  Cuthbert  Buck  of  the  Earn  Hands,  both  colledfed  by  Willoughby,  and  in* 
fertcd  in  his  Ornithology,  P.362. 

The  Male  Bird,  reprefented  Handing,  hath  the  Bill  not  fo  much  compreiTed  as  is  common 
in  Bucks,  it  is  of  a  blackifh  Colour,  and  indented  on  the  Edges  of  both  upper  and  lower  Mandi¬ 
bles  where  they  meet,  except  at  the  Point  •,  the  Tip  of  the  upper  Mandible  overhangs  the  lower 
a  little ;  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill  enters  the  Forehead  on  each  Side  with  two  remarkable  fharp  An¬ 
gles,  and  the  Feathers  oh  each  Side  of  the  Head  extend  themfelves  in  acute  Angles  into  the  Bill 
juft  beneath  the  Noftrils,  as  the  Figures  more  fully  exprefs :  There  paffes  from  the  Forehead  to 
the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  two  broad  Bars  of  Black,  in  which  Spaces  the  Eyes  are  placed  ; 
there  is  a  white  Space  on  the  Top  of  the  Head,  dividing  the  black  Marks,  almoft  to  the  Bill ; 
the  Remainder  of  the  Head,  all  the  Neck,  Back,  and  lefler  covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings,  are 
White.  On  the. hind  Part  of  the  Neck,  juft  below  the  Ends  of  the  black  Marks,  the  Fea¬ 
thers  are  of  a  light  Green-colour,  foftened  into  the  White,  and  appear  more  like  an  accidental 
Stain,  than  any  natural  Mark  *,  and  I  ftiould  have  taken  it  for  fuch,  had  not  different  Subjedls 
confirmed  it  natural  :  All  the  Quills  are  Black  or  Dusky,  except  three  or  four  of  the  innermoft 
next  the  Back,  which  are  White;  the  firft  Row  of  covert  Feathers  next  above  the  Quills  are  al- 
fo  Dufky ;  the  inner  Coverts  of  the  Wings  are  White;  the  Tail  is  of  a  dirty  Black-colour; 
the  Belly,  Sides  under  the  Wings,  and  covert  Feathers  both  above  and  beneath  the  Tail,  are 
of  a  deep  Black-colour ;  on  the  Breaft  the  Black  and  White  do  not  break  of  fuddenly,  but  are 
intermixed  a  little  into  each  other The  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  very  dirty  Brown  or  Blackifh 
Colour,  having  four  Toes  Handing  after  the  ufuaJ  Manner,  and  webb’d^s  in  the  common  ; 
the  two  inner  and  the  two  hind  Toes  have  lateral  Fins  or  Webs,  as  is  coranuon  to  this  Genus  ; 
the  Claws  are  Black, 

The  Female,  reprefented  by  the  diftant  Flying  Bird  in  this  Plate,  in  Shape,  Size,  Colour 
of  the  Bill,  and  Feet,  agrees  exaftly  with  the  Male ;  but  the  Plumage  is  quite  different,  it  being 
all  over  of  a  Brown-colour,  mixed  with  tranfverfe  Lines  of  Black,  except  the  Tail  and  greater 
Wing  Feathers,  which  were  of  a  Duflcy-colour.  Thefe  Birds  hatch  their  Young  on  the  Coaft 
of  Nortvay  in  the  Month  of  June ;  this  I  difcovered  by  buying  of  a  Fiftierman  in  Norway  at  the 
latter  End  of  May,  1718,  a  Hen  of  this  Kind,  which  I  gave  to  a  Perfon  to  prepare  for  roaft- 
ing,  who  brought  me  out  of  her  an  Egg  fully  formed,  larger  than  a  Buck  Egg,  and  of  a  green¬ 
er  Colour  than  is  common  in  tame  Buck's  Eggs. 

Thefe  Birds  were  brought  preferved  dry  from  Greenland,  and  are  depofited  at  Sir  Hans  Shane's 
at  Chelfea,  I  believe  they  are  found  on  all  the  Coafts  and  Hands  of  the  Northern  Seas.  I 
find  this  Bird  mentioned  in  the  Fliftory  of  the  Hands  of  Farro  tranflated  from  the  Banijh  Lan¬ 
guage;  which  TraiSl  being  fcarce,  I  fliall  tranfcribe  therefrom  what  relates  to  this  Bird,  that  its 
Fliftory  may  be  more  full.  “  The  Eider  Cock  is  Brown  as  the  Hen  when  he  is  young,  but 
“  when  he  is  old  he  groweth  almoft  White,  and  is  called  Eider-Blink:  From  this  Fowl  is  ga- 
“  thered  Eider  Down,  which  the  Eider  plucks  off  from  its  Breaft,  and  layeth  in  its  Neft  about 
“  the  Eggs,  when  it  hatcheth  them,  and  when  they  are  come  our,  and  are  fled  away  with 
“  their  Dam,  this  Down  is  taken  up  from  the  Neft,  being  then  full  of  Mofs  and  Straw,  of 

“  which  it  is  cleanfed,  and  dried.  The  Down  which  is  plucked  off  at  other  Times  from  the 

“  Eider  is  good  for  nothing,  for  it  is  fat,  and  rotteth.” 

As  I  find  much  wanting  in  former  Deferiptions  of  thefe  Birds  to  make  them  perfeft,  and  no 
Figures  to  enlighten  them,  I  hope  this  Labour  will  not  be  flighted  by  the  Inquifitive  and  Cu¬ 
rious.  I  take  it  to  be  a  Sea  Buck,  frequenting  only  Salt-Waters,  The 


(  99  ) 

’The  Dusky  and  Spotted  Due  k, 

HIS  Bird  is  about  the  Bignefs  of  the  common  Mallard  or  Duck  j  it  ha  th  a 
^  fhorter  Bill  by  a  third  Part,  and  not  fo  much  comprelTed  as  in  the  common' 
Duck  :  The  Bill  meafures  from  the  Point  to  the  Angles  of  the  Mouth  one  Inch  and  a 
Half }  the  Wing  when  clofed  is  feven  Inches  arid  a  half  long-. 

The  Bill  is  of  a  Dark  or  Blackifh  Colour,  indented  on  the  Edges  of  the  upper  and 
lower  Part,  'where  they  meet  j  the  Noftrils  are  pretty  near  together  in  the  upper  Part  of 
the  Bill  j  it  is  a  little  hooked  at  the  Point  of  the  upper  Mandible  :  The  Sides,  of  the 
Head  between  the  Bill  and  Eyes  are  White,  from  which  on  each  Side  there  extends  a 
Line  of  White  over  the  Eyes,  which  changes  gradually  into  a  Reddilh  Orange-colour, 
and  reaches  to  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head ;  the  Eye-lids  beneath  the  Eyes  are  White  ;  it 
hath  alfo  a  white  Spot  on  each  Side  of  the  Head,  about  the  Place  of  the  Ears ;  there  is 
alfo  a  white  Line  paffes  from  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  on  each  Side  down  the  Neck^  the 
Gro-wn  of  the  Head  is  Black,  the  Feathers  on  the  Forehead  extending  in  a  Peek  into  the 
Bill  between  the  Noftriis  j  the  Sides  of  the  Head  behind  the  Eyes  are  of  a  dark  Blue,  a 
little  inchning  to  Purple  j  the  whole  Neck,  both  before  and  behind,  between  the  wdiite 
Lines,  is  Black  j  between  the  Bottom' of  the  Neck  and  Bread;  is  a  Collar  or  Circle  of 
White,  continued  almofl  round  it,  being  broken  off  only  a  little  juff  behind  ^  the  Fea¬ 
thers  bordering  on  this  Collar,^  both  above  and  beneath,  are  of  a  deep  Black  ;  there  are 
between  this  Collar  and  the  Wings  on  each  Side  a  longifh  Plat  of  white  Feathers  bor¬ 
dered  round  with  Black,  tranfveriely  placed ;  the  Back  is  next  the  Neck  of  a  dark 
purplilh  Blue,  in  the  Middle  of  a  dirty  black  Brown ;  the  Rump  and  Covert  Feathers 
of  the  Tail  are  of  a  deep  Black,:  wdth  a  blue  Glofs-:  The  greater  Quills  of  the  Wing, 
and  the  Tail  Feathers  are  of  a  dirty  black  Brown-colour;  the  middle  Quills  have  their 
outer  Webs  of  a  fine  fliining  Blue  Purple ;  the  Coverts  immediately  above  thefe  middle 
Qmlls  are.  of  the  fame  Colour,  with  white  Tips ;  the  inner  Quills  next  the  Back,  and 
the  Feathers  that  fpring  from  the  Shoulders  and  fall  over  them,  are  of  a  blueifii  Afh-co- 
lour  on  the  Borders  of  their  Webs,  and  White  in  their  Middles  down  by  their  Shafts; 
the  leffer  Coverts  of  the  Wings  are  Afh-colour,  with  a  white  Spot  in  the  middle  of  them 
on  each  Wing ;  the  Ridge  of  the  Wings  about  the  Joint  is  of  a  Reddifii  Brown ;  the 
Infides  of  the  Wings  are  of  a  Dufky  Brown-colour  ;  the  Bi  eaft  below  the  Collar  is  of  a 
blueilh  Afh--colour ;  the  Belly  and  Thighs  of  a  more  dirty  Colour,  inclining  to  Black; 
the  Feathers  on  the  Sides  are  of  a  Red  Brown  or  dull  Orange-colour,  which  partly  cover 
the  Wings  when  they  are  clofed  :  There  is  on  each  Side  of  the  Tail,  where  the  upper  and 
under  covert  Feathers  meet,  a  fmall  white  Spot;  the  Legs,  Feet  and  Claws  are  of  a 
blueilh  Black  ;  the  Toes  webbed  and  finned,  as  the  Figure  expreffes  them. 

This  Bird  was  brought  with  others,  preferved,  from  Newfoundland  in  America :  It 
was  lent  me  by  Mr.  Holms ^  of  the  Dower  of  London  ;,  he  fays  the  NewfoundlandYdditx% 
call  it  the  Lord^  for  what  Reafon  I  cannot  tell ;  but  I  fuppofe  the  Reafon  of  this  Name 
may  be  from  theLikenefs  of  a  Chain  it  has  about  its.;Neck,c  feeing,  the  wearing  of  pold 
Chains  is  an  antient  Mark  of  Dignity  in  Europe.  I  cannot  difeover  any  Figure,  or  the 
leaft  Hint  of  Defeription  of  this  Bird ;  fo  I  believe  I  may  venture  to  pronounce  it  a 
non  defeript. 

rhe 


(  100  ) 


7he  little  Black  and  White  Duck. 

This  Bird  feemed  to  me  to  be  fomcthing  lefs  than  the  common  T>uck ;  I  take 
it  to  be  of  the  Size  of  a  Widgeon  \  the  Bill  is  an  Inch  and  half  long  from  the  Point 
to  the  Angle  of  the  Mouth,  and  the  Wing,  when  clofed,  meafures  a  little  over  feven 
Inches. 

I’he  Bill  is  of  a  dirty  Black-colour,  made  much'  in  the  Form  of  other  Duck'^  Bills,, 
but  rather  Ihorter  in  Proportion  than  fome  of  this  Tribe  :  The  Head  is  of  a  deep  gloffy 
Black,  except  a  large  white  Spot  which  begins  behind  tlie  Eyes  on  each  Side,  and 
joins  in  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  j  the  black  Feathers  next  the  Bill  all  round  have  a 
fine  green  Luftre  j  thofe  on  the  Crown  and  Beginning  of  the  Neck  are  more  purplifh 
the  Neck  a  little  below  the  Head  is  White  all  round  j  the  lower  Part  of  the  Neck  be- 
hind  and  the  Back  are  of  a  Black-colour,  having  no  Glofsj  the  Rump  and  Feathers 
covering  the  Tail  are  of  a  dirty  White  j  the  middle  Feathers  of  the  Tail  were  remark¬ 
ably  longer  than  the  Side  Feathers,  which  fhortened  gradually  to  the  outermoft  on 
each  Side,  they  were  all  of  a  dirty  Brown  or  Blackifh  Colour  on  the  upper  Sides,  and 
fomething  fainter  beneath :  The  Outermoft  of  the  Qmlls  of  the  Wings  are  Black, 
the  Middlemoft  have  deep  white  Tips,  their  Bottoms,  which  are  hid-  by  the  covert 
Feathers,  being  Dusky  j  three  or  four  of  the  inner  Quills  next  the  Back  are  Black  j 
the  firft  Row  of  covert  Feathers  are  Black  where  they  fall  on  the  greater  or  black 
Quiilsj  and  White  where  they  cover  the  white  Quills  j  the  leffer  Coverts  are  White, 
yet  with  fome  Mixture  of  Black  round  the  Ridge,  where  it  falls  on  the  Breaft,  and 
in  the  Skin,  which  connects  the  Joints  of  the  Wings,  together :  There  fprings  horn 
each  Shoulder  a  Plat  of  white  Feathers  which  fall  backward  in  Points  between  the 
Back  and  Wings;  the  Neck,  whole  under  Side  to  the  Tail,  and  covert  Feathers 
within-hde  of  the  Wings,  are  White  ;  the  Legs  and  Feet  are  of  a  yellow  Orange-co¬ 
lour,  the  Claws  Black ;  the  Number  of  Toes,  their  Standing,  and  Manner  of  being, 
webb’d,  are  expreffed  in  the  Figure. 

This  Bird  was  given  me  by  Mr.  Holms  of  the  Tower,  who  has  often  obliged  me 
in  this  Way  ;  He  fays  it  was  brought  from  Newfoundland  in  America,  where  the  Sea¬ 
men  call  it  a  Spirit,  but  for  what  Caufe  I  know  not.  1  conjedure  it  to  be  a  very 
fudden  Diver,  and  it  may  perhaps  as  fuddenly  appear  again  in  a  diftant  Part  of  the 
Sea,  which  Faculty  agrees  very  well  with  the  Notion  the  Vulgar,  have  of  Spiidts.  In 
feveral  of  the  Birds,  which  I  have  received  from  my  Friends  and  foreign  Correfpon- 
dents,  I  have  mentioned  the  Length  of  the  Wings,  when  clofed,  which  I  think  muft, 
hold  its  Meafure  pretty  near  both  in  the  Living  and  dried  Bird.  One  cannot  witK 
Certainty  give  the  Length  and  Breadth  of  dried  and  fluff’d^  Birds  when  the  Bodies  are 
taken  out  of  their  Skins,  as  we  may  of  living  or  newly  kill’d  Birds. .  It  is  very  ufeful  to- 
have  the  Meafures  of  fuch  Parts  as  can  be  meafured.  I  have  not  feen  any  Figure,  or 
lead  any  Defcription  agreeing  with  tliis  Bird,.. 


100 


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1 


lOl 


(  101  ) 

"Ihi  Summer  Duck  of  Catesby. 

This  Bird  is  lels  than  the  common  Duck ;  I  take  it  to  be  about  the  Size  of  a  fVigeon'.  It 
meafures  from  Tip  to  Tip  of  the  Wings  extended,  30  Inches  and  a  Half,  from  the  Bill 
Point  to  the  End  of  the  Tail,  nineteen  Inches  and  a  Half,  to  the  Ends  of  the  Toes  only  18 
and  a  Half;  the  Bill,  from  the  Tip  to  the  Angles  in  the  upper  Mandible  that  point  into  the 
Forehead,  is  two  Inches  long. 

The  upper  Mandible  of  the  Bill  is  Yellow  where  it  joins  to  the  Head,  the  Middle  is  Red,  and 
toward  the  Tip  it  is  whitilh ;  it  hath  a  long  black  Spot  in  its  upper  Part  between  the  Noftrils,  and 
its  Edges  and  hooked  Part  are  Black;  the  lower  Part  of  the  Bill  is  wholly  Black;  the  Tongue 
and  Infide  of  the  Mouth  is  of  a  Flelh-colour  ;  the  lris  of  the  Eye  is  of  a  Hazel-colour,  encompalfed 
with  Eyelids  of  a  fine  Red-colour :  It  hath  a  double  loofe  Plume  or  Creft  hanging  backward  ;  the 
uppermoft  is  Green,  of  a  fliining  Luftre ;  then  fucceeds  a  white  Line,  beginning  at  the  Bafis  of 
the  Bill,  and  palling  above  the  Eye  the  whole  length  of  the  Plume:  Beneath  this  is  the  fecond 
Creft,  of  a  dark  fhining  Purple-colour  ;  a  fecond  white  Line  proceeds  from  behind  the  Eye,  and 
parts  the  lower  Creft  from  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  :  The  Sides  of  the  Head  are  of  a  Purple- 
colour,  but  fomething  greenifh  next  the  Bill ;  the  Throat  is  White,  from  which  proceeds  a  white 
Line  on  each  Side,  and  turns  up  behind  the  Eyes ;  below  thefe  there  paffcs  backward  on  each  Side 
a  white  Line;  thefe  almoft  meet  in  the  hind  Part  of  the  Neck  under  the  Creft:  The  Neck  and 
Breaft  are  of  a  dark  brownilh  Red,  thick  fpotted  on  the  fore  Part  with  triangular  Spots  of  White  ; 
at  the  Bottom  of  the  Neck  on  each  Side  is  a  broad  tranlverfe  Bar  of  White,  and  immediately  be¬ 
neath  ^  and  joining  to  them,  is  a  tranfverfe  Bar  of  Black  ;  the  Back  is  of  a  dark  Brown-colour, 
with  changeable  G Ioffes  of  Copper-colour  and  Green ;  the  Tail  and  its  Covert  are  Duflcy,  but  the 
Edges  of  the  Feathers  Ihine  with  a  fine  green  Glols:  There  are  amongft  the  Coverts  of  the  Tail 
a  few  long  gloffy  Copper-colour’d  Feathers,  which  hang  down  on  each  Side  :  The  greater  Quills 
are  firftofa  Dufky  Colour,  with  green  Tips,  the  Edges  of  the  outer  Webs  being  White;  the 
middle  Quills  are  of  a  moft  illuftrious  Blue,  with  narrow  white  Tips ;  a  few  of  the  Quills  next  the 
Back  are  wholly  Blue;  the  firft  and  fecond  Row  of  covert  Feathers  that  cover  the  blue  Quills  are 
of  the  fame  Colour,  yet  all  thefe  Feathers  fometimes  caft  a  Purple  or  greenifh  Refledtion  ;  the  lefier 
Coverts  of  the  Wings  are  of  a  gloffy  Brown  like  the  Back.  The  Infides  of  the  Quills  are  dark 
Afh-colour ;  the  inner  covert  Feathers  of  the  Wings  are  White,  with  irregular  tranverfe  Lines 
of  Black:  The  Feathers  of  the  Sides,  which  fall  over  Part  of  the  Wings,  are  beautifully  painted 
with  arched  Lines  of  Black  and  White,  tranfverfely  drawn ;  the  Sides  juft  beneath  thefe  are  of  a 
yellowifh  Brown-colour,  with  very  fine  tranfverfe  Lines  of  Dufky,  below  which  on  each  Side  are  a 
few  round  dufky  Spots;  The  lower  Part  of  the  Breaft,  and  Middle  of  the  Belly,  all  along  to  the 
Vent,  is  purely  White  ;  the  covert  Feathers  beneath  the  Tail  are  Black  ;  the  Legs  and  Toes  are 
of  a  brownifh  Orange-colour ;  the  Webs  Dusky  ;  the  Claws  Black :  1  could  difcover  no  appendant 
Fin  on  the  hind  Toes. 

This  Bird  wasfentmeby  my  honour’d  Friend,  Sir  Robert  Abdy^  Bart.  It  was  fhot  in  a  Pond 
at  the  Seat  of  Rdilliam  Nicholas^  Efq;  a  Relation  of  Sir  Robert's.  It  is  a  Native  of  North  America^ 
and  is  fuppofed  to  have  ftray’d  from  fome  Gentleman’s  Houfc  to  the  Place  where  it  was  kill’d. 
Mr.  Catesby  hasdefcribed  this  Bird  in  his  Hiftoty  of  Carolina,  vol.  i.  p.  97.  Therefore  to  compleat 
this  Hiftory  I  fhall  borrow  the  following  Lines  of  my  Friend  :  “  They  breed  m  Virginia  and  Caro-- 
“  Una,  and  make  their  Nefts  in  Holes  of  tall  Trees  (made  by  Wood- Peckers)  growing  in  Water^ 

“  particularly  Cyprefs-Trtts.  While  they  are  young,  and  unable  to  fly,  the  old  Ones  carry  them 
“  on  their  Backs  from  their  Nefts  into  the  Water;  and  at  the  Approach  of  Danger  they  fix  with 
“  their  Bills  on  the  Backs  of  the  old  Ones,  who  fly  away  with  them.  The  Female  is  all  over 
“  Brown.”  I  liippofe,  by  the  Name,  it  is  a  Bird  of  PaflTage,  and  retires  Southvvard  from 
Carolina,  &c.  at  the  Approach  of  Winter.  I  have  had  the  Advantage  of  feeing  feveral  of  thefe 
Birds  brought  from  Carolina  to  London  alive,  as  well  as  the  above  defcrilaed,  which  was  newly  kill’d  ; 

1  he  Females  of  thofe  I  have  feen  are  all  over  Brown,  having  fomething  of  a  Creft,  like  the  Male, 

I  did  not  figure  this  to  make  an  Amendment  to  Mr.  Catesbfs,  but  at  the  Requeft  of  the  above 
mentioned  Gentlemen,  who  favoured  me  with  the  Bird,  and  are  Sabferibers  to  this  Work. 

O 


(  102  ) 

ne  Chinese  Teal. 


HIS  furprizing  uncommon  Bird  is  about  the  Size  of  our  ^eak  or  rather  larger.  If  there  be- 
any  Difference ;  Its  Colours  are  as  beautiful  as  the  Form  of  its  WingS  is  rare. 

The  Bill  is  like  that  of  a  common  Teal^  of  a  dull  Reddifh-colour  j  the  Eyes  are  of  a  Hazel- 
colour  5  the  Sides  of  the  Head,  from  the  Bafis  of  the  Bill  to  the  Ears,  are  White,  in  the  Middle 
of  which  Spaces  the  Eyes  are  placed  ;  the  Crown  of  the  Head  is  of  a  fine  Green-colour*,  from 
above  the  Eyes  backward  there  paffes  on  each  Side  a  Bar  of  Purple  Feathers  *,  below  thefe  Bars  the 
Feathers  are  Green,  on  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  *,  all  thefe  Feathers  on  the  Head  are  very  longj^. 
which  form  a  Creft,  ot  Topping,  which  it  can  raife  a  little,  or  let  fall  behind  the  Neck,  as  the 
Figure  reprefents  i  The  Feathers  on  die  hind  Part  of  the  Neck,  and  a  little  Way  down  the  fore 
Part,  are  narrow,  and  fharp  pointed,  like  thofe  on  the  Necks  of  Cocks,  of  a  pleafant  Red-colour,, 
inclining  very  little  to  a  Yellow  Caft  5  the  Bread;  is  of  a  Red-Wine  Colour,  or  a  little  more  inclin¬ 
ing  to  Purple  ;  at  the  Bottom  of  the  Neck,  on  each  Side  of  the  Breaft,  is  a  Spot  of  black  and 
white  Bars  alternately  fucceeding  each  other,  tranfverfly  placed  :  The  Back  and  covert  Feathers 
of  the  Wings  are  of  a  dark  Brown,  or  Dufky-colour,  with  a  changeable  Luftre  of  Blue  and 
Green :  the  long  or  outer  Quills  of  the  Wings  are  of  a  Black  or  Dark  Colour,  their  outer  Webs 
near  their  Bottoms  being  edged  with  White :  The  middle  Quills  are  of  a  very  fine  changeable 
blue  Green-colour,  tipp’d  with  White:  Three  oi*  four  of  the  Quills  next  the  Body  are  brownifh,, 
with  their  outer  Webs  edg’d  with  White,  as  are  fome  of  the  Feathers  that  fall  between  the  BacL 
and  Wings.  What  gives  this  Bird  its  extraordina-ry  Figure  is  two  Feathers,  one  amongft  the 
Quills  of  each  Wing,  which,  when  the  Wings  are  clofed,  rife  above  the  Back  in  the  Manner  the. 
Figure  reprelents  them  *,  thefe  Feathers  are  of  a  dull  Orange,  or  bright  Bay.7cplour,  on  their  upper 
or  broader  Webs,  edged  toward  their  Points  with  Black;  the  narrow  or.  lower  Webs  are. of  a  fine 
Blue,  except  their  Points,  which  are  Bay,  like  the  upper the  Shafts  of  thefe  Feathers  are  White  , 
»“See  the  Feather  drawn  feparate  from  the  Bird  in  the  Print.  The  Tail  is  Brown,  with  a  Glofs> 
©f  Blue ;  the  Belly  and  Coverts  beneath. the  Tail  are  White ;  the  Side  Feathers,  .which  fall  partly 
over  the  Wings,  are  of  a  light  Cinerious  Brown,  with  tranfverfe  arched  Lines  of  White  and 
Black  alternately  placed  ;  the  Legs  and  Toes  are  of  an  Orange-colour ;  ^  the  Webs  between  the- 
Toes  Dufl<y  the  Claws  Black, 

I  drew  this  Bird  at  Richmond  in  Surry,  from  the  living  Bird  kept  in  the  Gardens  of  Sir 
Matthew  Decker,  Bart.  I  find  in  Kempfer’s  Hijiory  of  Japan  an  Account  of  a  Bird,  which  I  think? 
Gan  be  no  other  but  the  above  deferibed  ;  it  is  as  follows:  “  Of  Ducks  alfo  there  are  feveral  dif- 
ferent  Kinds;,  one  Kind,  particularly,  I  cannot  forbear  mentioning,  becaufe  of. the  furprifing. 
Beauty  of  its  Male,  call’d  Kinmodjui,  which  is  fo  great,  that  being  fhew’d  its  Pidure  ioi 
Colours,  1  could  hardly  believe  my  own  Eyes  till  I  faw  the  Bird  itfelf,  it  being  a  very  common 
one  ;  ks  Feathers  are  wonderfully  diverfified  with  the  fineft  Colours  imaginable  ;  about  the- 
Neck  and  Breaft  chiefly  they  are  Red  ;  the  Head  is .  crowned  with  a  moft  magnificent  Top- 
ping:  The  Tail  rifing  obliquely,  and  the  Wings  ftanding  up  over  the  Back  in  a  very  Angular 
Manner,  afford  to  the  Eye  a  Sight  as  curious  as  uncommon.’*  —  See  this  Qiiotation /r.,  1 29.. 
of  the  above  Hiftory,,  and  in  Hab.  x.  a  fmalJ  Figure  agreeing  with  my  Drawing,  I  have  obferved 
this -Bird  with  its  Female  feveral  Times  figur’d  together  in  . colour’d  Chinefe  Pkfures,  of  the  more- 
curious  Sort,  in  which  the  Males  are  colour’d  near  like  what  I  have  deferibed  the  above,  but  the 
Females  are  always  reprefented  all  Brown.  The  white  Flower  with  which  I  have  decorated  the- 
ground.  Work  is  after  Nature,  and  is  found  growing  in  all. Waters  round  about  London  m  the- 
MontliS  of  May  June^. 

Tm. 


1 


W':-- 


J 


w- 


j 


{  103  ■  ) 


The  Qjj  I  c  k-H  atch,  or  Wolverene, 

This  Beaft  feems  to  be  near  double  the  Bjgnefs  of  a  common  Fox  :  To  the 
beft  of  my  Memory  it  was  of  the  Size  of  fome  Wohes  I  have  feen  brought  from 
Germany ;  in  walking,  its  Back  rifes  arch-ways ;  it  carries  its  Head  pretty  low  |  it 
reds  the  whole  Length  of  its  Feet  quite  to  the  Heels  or  firft  Joints  of  the  Legs  on 
the  Ground,  when  it  walks,  fo  that  the  Belly  is  not  far  from  the  Ground  :  As  to  its 
Look  it  has  fomething  in  it  Between  the  Fox  and  Bear\  the  Top  of  the  Head  and 
Snout  is  very  broad,  when  viewed  front-ways,  and  the  Feet  pretty  broadj  approach¬ 
ing  in  Proportion  near  to  thofe  of  a  Bear the  Tail  is  of  a  middling  Length,  and 
fomething  bulhy  toward  its  Tip. 

All  the  Snout,  upper  and  under  Jaw,  as  far  as  the  Eyes,  is  of  a  Black-colour  |  the-' 
Forehead  above  becomes  gradually  of  a  whitifh  Colour  ;  the  Eyes  are  of  a  dark  Colour ;  . 
the  Throat  and  lower  Side  of  the  Neck  is  White,  firfi;  fpotted  with  Black,  having 
fome  tranfverfe  Bars  of  Black  on  the  under  Side  of  the  Neck  j  the  Ears  are  fmall  and-^ 
round,  appearing  but  little  longer  than  the>  Hair  that  grows  on  the  Head,  they  are 
covered  with  fhort  brown  Hair  j  the  hind  Part  of  the  Head  and  Neck,.-the  whole 
Body  both  above  and  beneath,  the  Legs,  and  the  Tail,  are  all  of  a  Brown  or  Chefnut; 
Colour,  clouded  lighter  and  darker  j  the  upper  Side  of  the  Neck  and  Beginning.’ 
of  the  Back  is  Dusky,  or  very  dark  Brown,-  which  gradually  changes  to  a  lighter,  or; 
more  pleafant  Brown,  in  the  Middle  of  the  Back ;  this  Colour  again  grows  by  De¬ 
grees  darker,  till  it  becomes  almof:  Black  in  the  hind  Part  of  the  Back^  The  Tail  to=- 
■  ward  the  Tip  becomes  of  a  Dusky-colour ;  it  hath  a  broad  Bar  of  very  light  afh-co- 
lour’ d  Brown  paffing  round  the  Body,  beginning  on  each  Shoulder,  proceeding  on 
the  Sides  backward,  and  meeting  on  the  Rump,  juft  above  the  Tail,  where  it  is 
broadeft ;  the  Fur  of  the  whole  Body  is  pretty  long,  and  feems  not  to  lie  fo  flat  to 
the  Skin  as  in  fome  Animals  5  all  the  Feet,  as  far  as  the  Heel,  or  firft  Joint,  are 
covered  with  fhort  black  Hair,  which  gradually  becomes  Brown  above  the  Knees ;  the- 
Clav/s  are  of  a  light  Horn  Colour  ^  it  hath  on  each  Foot  forward  four  Toes 3  , the- 
hind  Feet  have  five  Toes  each. 

This  Animal  was  brought  from  Hudfin' s-Bay\  the  moft  Northern  inhabited' Part  of 
America  :  It  lived  feveral  Years  at  Sir  Hans  Sloane's  Houfe  in  Loridon^  and  feemed  to' 
be  a  harmlefs,  gentle  Creature;  it  would  follow  like  a  Hog in  its  Progrelfion  it'' 
formed  a  circular  Flourifli,  turning  quite  round  every  few  Paces  it  made:.  I  believe” 
this  Motion  was  not  natural,  but  owing  to  its  having  loft  an  Eye,  for  it  turn’d  off 
always  on  the  Side  where  the  Eye  was  wanting-.  My  Friend,.  Mr.  Lights  fays,  he 
has  kill’d  many  of  them  in  Hudfon' s-Bay  (where  they  are  taken  for  their  Furs)  and 
that  they  are  a  fierce  Creature  in- making  Defence,  when  v/ounded  with  a  Gun,  or’ 
taken  in  Traps;  that  they  will  tear  the  Stock  from  the  Muflcet-barrel  with  their' 
Teeth,  when  the  Hunter  goes  to  difpatch  them  after  they  are  wounded ;  .and  that . 
they  often  do  more  Damage  to  Traps  and  Gins  by  biting  and  renting,  than,  the. 
Value  of  their  Furs  amount  to:  I  believe  there  hath  been  no  Account  or  Figure 
yet  given  of  this .  Beaft.. 


(  X04  1 

’Thi  Monax,  or  Marmotte,  of  America. 

HIS  Animal  is  of  the  Size  of  a  Rabbit  it  burieth  itfelf  under  Ground,  or 
1  creepeth  into  hollow  Roots  of  Trees,  and  fleepeth  all  Winter  j  it  hath  pretty 
much  the  Shape  and  general  Look  of  a  large  Rat,  the  Feet  feem  to  be  formed,  either 
for  climbing  Trees,  or  fcratching  Burroughs  for  its  Security :  It  is  a  Species  of  the 
Marmotte,  but  differs  fomething  in  Colour,  but  principally  in  that  the  Tail  is  much 
longer  in  Proportion. 

The  Snout,  both  upper  and  lower  Chops,  are  of  a  light  blueifh  Afli-colour  j  the 
Teeth  are  like  thofe  of  a  Rabbit  \  the  Eyes  are  of  a  dark  Colour,  rifmg  a  little  out  of 
the  Head  ;  it  hath  pretty  long  Smellers  about  the  Nofe  :  It  hath  befide  thefe  a  Plat  of 
long  hiif  Hares  on  each  Side  of  the  Head  beyond  the  Corners  of  the  Mouth ;  the 
Head  and  Body  are  all  over  of  a  Brown-colour,  a  little  of  a  greenifli  Caft,  fuch  as  we 
fee  in  fome  of  our  Water  ;  The  Grey  on  the  Snout,  and  the  Brown  behind  it, 
foften  into  each  other  ail  round  the  Head ;  the  Ears  are  fmall  and  round,  not  ftanding 
out  fo  much  in  Proportion  as  they  do  in  common  Rats ;  the  Brown-colour  is  darkefl 
on  the  Back,  fomething  lighter  on  the  Sides,  and  lighted:  of  all  in  the  Belly  j  the 
Feet,  -Toes,  and  Claws,  are  Black  as  far  as  the  Heel,  or  firft  Joint  of  the  Leg  j  the 
Toes  are  pretty  long,  and  divided  to  their  Bottoms,  as  in  Squirrels ;  the  Claws  aifo 
are  pretty  long  and  fharp ;  the  Tail  is  more  than  half  the  Length  of  the  Body :  It  is 
covered  with  blackifh  Brown  Hair,  of  a  middling  Length,  which  makes  the  Tail  ap¬ 
pear  in  a  fmall  Degree  bufhy. 

This  Bead:  was  brought  from  Maryland  in  North-America,  and  prefented  to  Sir  Ham 
Sloane,  who  kept  it  many  Years:  By  being  fed  with  foft  Meats,  and  Difufe  to  knaw, 
its  Teeth  grew  fo  long  and  crooked,  that  it  could  not  take  in  its  Food,  fo  to  pre- 
ferve  its  Life,  they  were  obliged  to  break  them  out.  This  Drawing  was  taken,  as  it 
lay  by  the  Fire  repodng  itfelf :  There  hath  been  no  Account  given  of  this  Animal 
that  I  know  of:  They  who  would  compare  its  Defcription  with  that  of  the  Marmotte, 
may  confult  Mem.  de  V Academie  Royal  des  Sciences,  depiiis  1666,  jufqula  1699,  'Tom. 
III.  troijieme  Partie,  Pa.  31,  where  they  will  find  a  Figure  and  Defcription  of  it.  I 
find  alfb  a  brief  Account  of  the  Mannotte,  in  a  fmall  Trad:  publifhed  Anno  1744, 
called  an  Account  of  the  Glacieres,  or  Ice  Alps  in  Savoy,  which,  true  or  falfe,  I  fhall 
tranfcribe  for  the  Amufement  of  the  Reader.  ‘‘  This  is  the  Account  the  Inhabitants 
“  give  us  of  this  Animal,  they  deep  dx  Months  of  the  Year,  that  is,  all  the  Winter, 
"  and  in  the  Summer  they  provide  a  warm  Couch  againd  their  Time  of  deeping ; 
“  for  this  End  they  cut  Herbs  with  thdr  Teeth,  and  in  order  to  carry  them  to  their 
“  Holes,  one  of  them  lays  on  its  Back,  and  the  others  load  it  like  a  Cart,  and  then 
“  drag  it  by  the  Ears  to  the  Hole.  They  pretend  alfo,  that  they  provide  againd:  be- 
ing  furprized,  by  placing  Centinels,  who  give  them  the  Alarm  by  a  whidling  Noife; 
“  they  eat  thefe  Mamnottes,  and  find  them  very  good,  and  ufe  their  Fat  to  burn  in 
“  Lamps.”  I  fufped  nothing  in  this  Account,  ^but  the  making  a  Cart  of  one  Animal, 
and  its  being  drawn  by  the  others ;  but  it  is  no  very  grofs  Fidion  if  it  be  fuch,  confi- 
dering  it  is  from  ignorant  Alpian  Peafants,  who  perhaps  take  it  from  Tradition. 

Dr.  Mitchel,  a  Phyfician  of  Virginia,  now  in  London,  has  informed  me  this  Animal 
has  much  the  Adions  of  a  Squirrel,  diud,  when  wild,  has  a  more  bufhy  Tail  than  this 
Figure  reprefents.  The 


,  ■ 


‘  j 


(  105  ) 

’The  Bill  of  the  Egyptian  Ibis,  and  the  leaf  Humming  Bird. 

H  E  upper  Figure  reprefents  the  Bill  of  the  Ibis  of  its  natural  Bignefs,  as  It  was  taken  out  of  an  em- 
balmed  Subjedl  (brought  from  ^gypt)  in  the  Prefence  of  his  Grace  the  Duke  of  Richmond.  The  Bill 
is  in  Depth  and  Width  near  the  fame,  being  quite  round  all  its  Length  :  Its  Appearance  in  its  dry  State  was 
fomething  rough ;  the  Bone  or  folid  Part  was  of  a  Reddilh  Brown-colour,  like  other  decay’d  Bones  ot 
Animals :  It  was  for  the  greateft  Part  cover’d  with  a  duiky  Skin,  which  was  peeled  off  at  both  Ends  j  it  was 
a  little  jagged  where  it  joined  to  the  Head,  neverthelefs  the  extream  Parts  toward  the  Head  fhew  it  of 
its  full  Length.  The  Point  of  the  Bill  was  perfedl  both  above  and  beneath.  By  preferving  this  Fragment 
the  Curious,  may  perhaps  hereafter  difcover  the  Bird  that  was  fo  famous  among  the  antient  Mgyptians.  The 
Academy  Royal  of  Paris  have  given  the  Defcription  of  a  white  Ibis^  whofe  Bill  feems  to  agree  well  enough 
with  this,  except  that  it  is  as  it  were  cut  off  at  the  End,  which  they  take  to  be  natural,  though  I  am  of 
Opinion  that  itmuft  be  accidental;  They  defcribe  the  Bill  thus,  “  The  Beginning  of  it  was  of  a  clear  Yellow, 
“  which  growing  infenhbly  ftronger,  became  of  a  Gold-colour,  very  deep  at  the  Extremity  ;  the  Surface 
“  of  the  Beak  was  fmooth,  and  polifhed  like  Ivory  or  Horn  ;  when  fhut  it  feemed  perfedfly  round  externally, 
“  and  inwardly  a  Canal  was  formed  of  the  fame  Shape  ;  the  two  Parts  thus  joined,  left  a  little  Opening  at 
“  the  End  to  let  out  the  Sea  Water,  which  they  fay  it  wafhes  itfelf  with  ;  the  Sides  of  the  Beak  were 
“  Iharp  and  hard,  like  all  the  reft  of  it,  of  a  Firmnefs  capable  to  cut  Serpents  in  two,  as  it  is  reported  it 
**  does.”  They  fay  this  Bird  was  brought  from  Mgypt,  and  lived  feveral  Months  at  Verfailles. — See  its 
whole  Defcription  in  Memoirs  de  V Academic  Royale  des  Sciences^  depuis  1666,  jufqu’a  1699,  Tome  3. 
troifieme  Partie,  p.  58.  T>r.  Sha^v,  in  his  Travels  or  Obfervations  on  &c.  fays,  p.  428.  the 

that  was  once  known  to  every  Family  [in  Mgypt,]  is  now  become  exceeding  rare  ;  though  the  Want  of  it  is 
fufficiently  fupply’d  by  the  Stork.  In  the  Appendix  to  the  fame  Work,  the  Dodlor  has  given  Part  of  the  lower 
Beak  in  a  Figure  taken  from  an  embalmed  Subjedl,  but  through  fome  Miftake  it  is  called  the  upper',  1  fuppofe 
it  an  Error  of  the  Prefs  :  Some  of  the  Bones  of  the  Ibis  are  figured  alfo  in  the  faid  Appendix,  p.  65.  Thofe 
who  would  compare  the  Black  Ibis  of  Bellonius  with  the  White,  may  fee  him  tranflated  by  our  Countryman, 
Mr.  Willoughby,  in  his  Ornithology,  p.  288.  In  Pifo's  Hiftory  of  Brazil  there  feem  to  be  deferib’d  two 
Species  of  the  Ibis,  the  firft  p.  191.  call’d  Curicaca,  the  other  p.  200.  call’d  Jabiru. 

ij-  ijf  iji  •[i  35^  ^  i'i  ^4  1*4  ijj  ■J4  iJ4  ■••4  fjj  fJ4  ij;  iJ4  iJ4  ^  i*4  *^4  **4  ^  ^  ijfi  ^4  iJ4  yj4  fJ4  yj4  ^4  9^  yji  !J4  ^4  ••4  ••4  ^4  i"!*  9*4  i*4  ^4  ^4 

H  E  leaft  Humming  Bird  is  here  figured  of  its  natural  Bignefs  and  Shape.  The  Bill,  and  whole  upper 
Side  ot  the  Head,  Neck,  Body,  Wings,  and  Tail,  are  of  a  dirty  Brown-colour,  yet  in  the  Sun-fhine  there 
is  a  fraall  Glofs  of  a  golden  Green-colour,  which  ftrikes  not  the  Eye  in  common  Lights  ;  the  under  Side  of 
the  Head,  Neck,  and  the  Belly,  are  of  a  dirty  White  ;  the  outfide  Feathers  of  the  Tail  are  alfo  White;  the 
Legs  and  Feet  are  Black.  All  this  Tribe  of  Birds  have  a  very  fine  Tube  or  Pipe,  which  they  can  extend 
out  of  their  Mouths  beyond  the  Point  of  the  Bill ;  thefe  Tubes  feem  to  part  in  two  very  fmall  ones,  at  their 
Extremities;  with  this  Pipe  they  fuck  the  Juices  out  of  Flowers:  The  Egg  of  this  Bird,  as  I  fuppofe,  is 
figured  with  it  of  its  natural  Size  ;  it  is  of  a  White-colour.  The  Bird,  when  dry’d,  weighed  no  more  than 
five  Grains.  I  take  it  to  be  the  fame  with  the  fmalleft  Humming  Bird  of  Sir  Hans  Sloane’s  Hiftory  of  Ja^ 
maica,  vol.  2d,  p.  307.  where  he  fays  that  it  weighed  not  over  twenty  Grains  when  juft  killed.  Mr.  Ben¬ 
jamin  Cowel  obliged  me  with  this  Bird,  and  Mr.  P .  Colinfon  with  the  Egg ;  they  were  brought  from  Ja¬ 
maica. 

0QQ0C3QQOQ9O0  QQSQQQ  3OQQOQ9O0  9OQQOQ3(^0  QQO QQQ 

np  H  E  Beetles  here  figured,  are  of  their  natural  Bignefs ;  I  fuppofe  the  uppermoft  to  be  the  Male,  and  the 
lower  the  Female  ;  Their  Shape  differs  in  nothing  except  the  Sharpnefs  and  Length  of, the  Horns  in  the 
Male,  they  being  blunter  and  fhorter  in  the  Female:  The  Male  is  all  over  of  a  dark  Brown  or  Copper- 
colour,  with  a  Gold-like  ftiining  Glofs;  his  Eyes  are  Red.  The  Female  is  Black  and  Glofley,  her  Eyes  are 
alfo  Red. 

My  obliging  Friend,  Dr.  Matthezv  Lee,  Fellow  of  the  College  of  Phyficians,  furnifhed  me  with  thefe 
Beetles  ;  they  were  brought  from  the  Eaji  Indies.  Mr.  Petever  feems  to  have  two  Figures  of  the  Male  in  his 
Works,  one  of  which  he  fays  came  from  Borneo. 

There  U  on  one  Side  of  this  Plate  a  Scale  of  Six  Inches  of  the  Evglijh  Foot.  As  there  is  a  French  Tranflation 
of  this  Work  defign’d,  it  may  be  ufeful,  in  Foreign  Parts,  to  know  the  juft  Quantity  of  Meafure  I  have  made  Ufe 
of  throughout  this  Work  ;  but  it  is  to  be  noted  that,  for  Want  of  Exadtnefs,  the  fix  Inches,  in  the  Whole,  over-meafure 
fix  of  our  Standard  Inches  about  the  fixteenth  Part  of  an  Inch,  which  is  not  very  material.  The  different  flrrinking  of 
thick  and  thin  Papers  will  alfo  make  fome  very  fmall  Diffeience, 

P 


■ .  (  it  '■  , 

;  ■; 


ffki'i' 


A  N 


A  P  P  E  N  D  I  X 

TO  THE 

Foregoing  WORK, 

By  W  A  T  of 

ILLV  STRATION. 

SINCE  I  begEii  this  Work,,  !•  have  from  Time  to  Time  gathered  fome  few 
Hints,  which  were  at  different  Times  committed  to  Paper  as  they  came  into 
my  Mind.:  I  have  digefted  thefe  Thoughts  in  the  bed:  Manner  I  could,,  with; 
aXtefign,  in  fome  Meafure,.  to- improve  General  Knowledge  on  the  Subject 
herein  Seated,  I  have  made  thefe  Pages  fucceed  the  D'efcriptions,..  or  Subjed^  Matter, 
of  the  Book,  ,  it.  not  being  material  whether  they  be  read  fird:  or  laft. 

MAN,  when. he  beginnedi  to  exercife  his  rational  Faculties, ,  ought  to  fet  before 
his  intelledimd  Mind  the  Ideas  of  Truth  andiFalfehood,  and  endeavour  to  hnd  out,  in  . 
tlie  moil  drid:  and  abfolute  Senle,,  what  they  are  5.  and,  when  he  hath  found  them,  he. 
ought  to  govern  all  his  Adions  by  the  former,  and  avoid  the.  latter :  But  it  is  ex¬ 
ceeding  hard  to  difoover  what  Truth  is  in  a  World  of  Falfehood  and  Controverfy,. 
where  all  of  us  fuck  in  Error  with  our  Milk. .  Is  not  great  Part  of  the  World  taught 
to  believe,  that  tlieir  Senfes  are  Lyars,  and  that  Things  which  appeal'.!  to  be  one 
Thing,  to  the  drided  Scrutiny  of  our  Senfes,  are  really  and  abfolutsly  quite  other- 
wife  ?  Many  we  know  fuffer  themfelves  to  be  led  into  fuch.  ineonfident  Beliefs  as 
thefo  ;  but  it  is  a  fixed  and  firm  Article  of  my  private  Faith,,  that  God  hath  givens 
us  our  Senfes  as  a  Touchd;one  of  Truth,  and  that  whatevei-  Writing,  Tradition,  or 
bold  Affertioni  advances  any  Opinions,  that  diredly  and  flatly  contradid.  the  Senfes, 
which  God  hatJi  given  us  to  judge  by,,  are  abfolute. Ealfehoods,.  and  ought  to  be  rt- 
jeded  of  all  Mankind,. 


If 


(  ro8  ) 

If  we  can  difcover  what  Truth  and  Falfehood  are  really,  we  then  have  Grounds 
to  refled  upon,  and  may  form  our  Refledions  into  Reafonings  j  but  what  right  Rea- 
fon  is,  we  fliall  find  more  difficult  to  difcover,  than  what  is  fimple  Truth  and  Falfe¬ 
hood  ;  For  our  Conceptions  of  Matter,  being  only  what  enter  by  the  dark  Doors  of 
our  Senfes,  are,  when  entered,  to  one  Man  one  Thing,  and  to  another  quite  a 
different  Thing,  which  maketh  human  Reafon  fo  fallacious  and  various  j  for  our 
Reafon  proceeding  from  Senfe,  and  Senfe  being  different,  or  receiving  different  Ideas 
from  the  fame  Objed  by  different  Men,  it  follows  of  Neceffity,  that  there  is  no  fuch 
Thing  abfolutely  as  a  general  human  Reafon,  which  is  right  and  the  fame,  the  Stan¬ 
dard  of  which  to  be  conveyed  by  Writing,  or  Tradition,  from  one  Age  to  another ; 
but  that  every  Man  hath  his  own  particular  Reafon,  which  is  different  in  Men,  ac¬ 
cording  as  God  hath  given  them  Strength,  or  Weaknefs  in  their  Underfianding,  to 
judge  of  fuch  Things  as  enter  by  the  Senfes.  It  fecmeth  to  me,  that  in  various 
Men  the  Senfes  differ  infinitely ;  for  that  Colour,  which  is  a  Favourite  in  the  Eyes  of 
one,  is  indifferent,  or  difagreeable,  to  another,  which  perhaps  may  proceed  from 
different  Tindures  in  the  Chryflralline  Humour  ;  and  fome  Sounds  are  indifferent, 
or  perhaps  difpleafing  to  fome,  tho’  they  fill  others  with  the  highefl  Rapture.  Men 
vary  in  the  fame  Manner  in  the  Senfes  of  Touching,  Tailing,  and  Smelling  :  Human 
Reafon  alfo  receives  other  Impreffions  (which  generally  cleave  too  fafl  to  it)  fuch  as 
proceed  from  the  different  Educations,  Religions,  and  Cuftoms  of  different  Times 
and  Places.  For  all,  who  have  feen  but  a  little  of  the  World,  know  how  very 
different  the  general  Reafonings  of  one  Country  are  from  thofe  of  another ;  and  he 
who  has  been  flightly  converfant  in  Hiflory  but  a  few  Ages  backward,  will  find,  that 
the  Opinions  and  Reafonings  of  the  fame  Place  and  People,  in  an  Age  or  two,  are 
quite  transformed  and  changed  ;  fo  that  I  cannot  fee  that  we  have,  in  our  imperfed 
State,  any  fuch  Thing  as  right  Reafon  founded  on  Demonflration,  except  in  fome 
few  Mathematical  Cafes,  which  muft  conftrain  the  Affent  of  all  Men.  Therefore, 
feeing  we  can  certainly  conclude  on  hardly  any  Thing  without  Controverfy,  we  mufi 
fleer  the  befl  Courfe  we  can,  fetting  before  our  Eyes  Truth  as  the  Port  we  endeavour 
to  gain,  which  otlght  always  to  be  our  Diredor  in  Opinions  and  Adions,  in  Rela¬ 
tion  to  God  and  Man,  as  well  as  in  our  general  Pradices  and  Speculations  in  the 
World. 

He  that  would  write  any  Thing  in  General  on  Nature,  or  on  any  particular  na¬ 
tural  Subjed,  ought,  fo  far  as  his  Faculties  will  permit  him,  to  penetrate  into  its 
Sources,  and  trace  it  backward,  if  polfible,  to  find  out  the  firfl:  Caufe  and  Mover  of 
all  Things.  If  we  confider  ourfelves,  and  the  Animal  Beings  that  inhabit  the  Face 
of  this  Globe,  we  mufl;  wonder,  at  firfl,  how  they  came  to  be;  but,  when  we  think 
of  the  infcrutable  Springs  of  Life  and  Motion,  we  muft  be  afloniflied  to  the  highefl: 
Degree,  not  knowing  from  whence  thefe  Things  fpring  :  And  we  can  folve  thele  in¬ 
conceivable  Things  no  other  Way,  than  by  fuppoling  there  muft  exifl:  fome  great, 
invifible,  inconceivable,  all-wife,  and  all-powerful  Creator;  Since  the  vifible  Crea¬ 
tion  is  fuflained  always,  producing,  the  fame  Forms  of  natural  Things,  which  fucceed 
from  one  Generation  to  another,  through  the  Courfe  of  Time;  which  could  not  be, 
if  fenfelefs  Chaos  prevailed,  as  fome  have  taught ;  for  were  the  immenfe  Mafs  of  Mat¬ 
ter  without  a  living,  all-powerful  Being  to  animate  it,  it  mufl;  refl  without  Motion, 

3  .  or 


(  109  ) 

or  at  bell;  ad  by  a  lifelefs  Ferment,  that  would  always  generate  new  and  mondrous 
Forms.  Now,  fince  from  natural  Light  we  have  difcovered  a  God  of  infinite  Power 
and  Wifdom,  whofe  Attributes  are  all  immenfurable  and  infinite,  we  cannot  fuppofe 
his  Kingdom,  Space,  or  Matter,  lefs  than  immenfe  and  eternal :  By  Eternity,  I  mean. 
Time,  not  as  meafured  by  the  Courfe  of  a  Planet  in  any  Syftem,  but  a  conftant,  con¬ 
tinued  Succefiion  of  Duration,  that  lhall  know  no  End  ;  by  Immenfity,  I  mean,  the 
greatefi;  given  Qimntity  of  Matter,  or  Space,  infinitely  multiplied,  which  infinite  Mul¬ 
tiplication  will  always  fall  infinitely  Ihort  of  the  immenfe  Q^ntlty  of  Matter ;  for  if 
we  cad  our  Thoughts  beyond  this  lower  Syftem,  and  dive  into  the  endlefs  Depths  of 
•Space,  we  are  utterly  loft  j  becaufe  the  Height,  Depth,  and  Extenlion  cn  all  Sides, 
flies  away  infinitely  fafter,  and  more  diftant,  than  the  fwifteft  and  moft  extended 
Thought  can  follow.  As  the  greateft  Part  of  Matter  is  to  be  multiplied  with¬ 
out  End,  fo  is  the  leaft  Part  of  Matter  to  be  divided  infinitely,  notwithftanding  the 
falfe  Dodlrine  of  Atoms,  leaft  or  indivifible  Parts  of  Matter,  and  the  feeming  Con- 
tradidtion  of  infinite  Numbers  contained  in  finite  Space;  for  God,  by  his  Power,  can 
as  eafily  pierce  infinitely  into  a  fmall  Thing)  as  extend  his  Dominion  through  the 
wide,  immenfe  Region. 

On  this  Principle  of  infinite  Number  contained  in  finite  Space,  I  fuppofe,  that 
God,  by  one  Adt  of  his  Will  and  Power,  created  the  firft  living  and  individual  Prin¬ 
ciple  of  every  fingle,  generating,  created  Being,  that  hath  made,  or  ftiall  hereafter 
make  its  Appearance  in  the  World ;  Thefe  living  and  individual  Principles,  being 
inclofed  one  within  another  infinitely,  were  placed  in  the  firft  vifible  Individuals  of 
each  Species ;  and  it  is  the  Work  of  Time  and  Generation  gradually  to  bring  to 
Light  the  inclofed  and  hidden  Principles,  which,  as  their  Progenitors  decay  and  fall 
off,  extend  themfelves  to  their  natural,  deftinated  Si^es,  in  order  to  keep  up  a  con- 
ftant  Succefiion  of  each  Species.  The  precife  Exadlnefs  of  Size,  Colour,  Shape,  and 
other  Conditions  of  Animals  and  Plants,  which  they  have  retained  in  all  Ages, 
wherein  Hiftory  hath  given  us  any  Account  of  them,  hath  induced  me  to  believe, 
that  all  the  Individuals  of  each  Species  were  produced  at  the  fame  Time,  by  one  Act 
of  the  Will  and  Power  of  God.  The  Animalcida  difcovered  in  the  Male  feminal 
Parts  of  all  living  Creatures  by  the  laborious  M.  Van  Leuwenhoeck^  in  his  microfeo- 
pical  Obfervations,  and  fince  his  Time  confirmed  by  many  others,  is,  I  think,  % 
ftrong  Argument  for  the  above  Opinion. 

To  proceed,  and  come  a  little  nearer  to  my  Purpofe : 

If  a  Man  may  be  allowed  truly  to  declare  what  Spirit  he  is  poftefied  with,  as  fome 
of  our  modern  Enthufiafts  have  falfly,  yet  boldly,  done  ;  I  muft  confefs,  that  a  Zeal 
for  exprefiing  natural  Things,  with  the  utmoft  Truth  and  Precifenefs,  hath  always 
infpired  me,  even  to  fuch  a  Degree,  that  I  have  fornetimes  been  afraid  it  would 
rife  to  fomething  like  what  appears  in  Bigots,  who  pretend  to  Tnfpiration  ;  but  as  I 
never  was  a  Favourer  of  fuch  enthufiaftick,  or  defigning  Men,  fo  I  was  alv/ayJs 
on  my  Guard,  leaft  my  natural  Reafoning  fiiould  be  corrupted  by  Flights,  of  which 
I  could  give  no  fatisfedtory  Account  to  the  common  Senfe  and  Underftariding  of 
Mankind :  But  it  is  Time  now  to  fpeak  more  direecly  to  the  Purpofe  of  this  Book* 

1  muft  confefs,  that  fome  Part  of  the  Subiedf  Matter  b.uth  already  been  treated  of  by- 
others,  yet  I  truft,  that  the  curious  anti  inqiiifiiive  Naluralifts  (when  they  compare 

*  former 


(  I  lO  ) 

former  Hlflorles  on  the  fame  Subjefts  with  what  I  have  here  prefented  to  the  Publick) 
will  think  I  had  good  Reafon  for  making  fome  Amendments :  The  far  greatefl 
Part  of  thefe  Figures  are  from  Subjeds  entirely  new,  their  Deferiptions  therefore  muff 
confequently  be  new,  as  are  the  Deferiptions  of  thofe  treated  of  before  by  others ;  yet 
that  there  might  be  nothing  wanting  to  perfed  this  Work,  I  have  fometimes,  where 
I  thought  it  neceflary,  joined  to  my  own  Deferiptions  the  Obfervations  of  Authors, 
as  well  Foreigners  as  my  own  Countrymen.  I  have  not  done  this,  to  the  beft  of  my 
Knowledge,  without  partieularly  mentioning  the  Author’s  Name,  or  the  Book  from 
whenee  it  was  borrowed ;  and  where  I  have  quoted  but  a  fingle  Line,  I  have  dif- 
tinguiflaed  it  by  the  ufual  Marks.  I  have  been  as  perfed  in  this  Work  as  the  Nature 
of  the  Thing  will  admit  of,  in  order  to  fit  it  to  be  added  to  a  new  general  Orni¬ 
thology  (which,  1  think,  is  wanting)  in  Cafe  any  one,  fit  for  the  Talk,  flaould  un¬ 
dertake  it.  It  may  not  be  here  improper  to  give  my  Thoughts  on  that  Subjedj  the 
Study  of  which  has  lain  dormant  for  many  Years  :  I  know  no  Knglifld  Author  who 
has  wrote  any  Thing  confiderable  fince  Mr.  Kay  revifed  Willoughby's  manufeript  HiL 
tory  of  Birds,  which  was  publifhed  Anno  1678;  till  of  later.  Years,  Mr.  Ray  hath 
added  fome  few,  which  fee  in  his  Sy7iopfts  Method.  Avium,  See.  where  he  has  men¬ 
tioned  the  Authors  from  whom  he  colleded  them.  The  Memoirs  of  the  Academy 
Royal  of  Paris,  on  fuch  Occafion,  ought  alfo  to  be  confulted,  where  fomething  new 
may  be  colleded.  Mr.  Cateshy,  in  his  Hiftory  of  Carolina,  &c.  hath  figured  and  de- 
feribed  upwards  of  a  hundred  rare  Birds,  the  greateft  Part  of  which  would  come  into 
a  new  Hiftory,  they  being  mofily  non-deferipts.  Albin  hath  publifired  a  great  many, 
I  think  upwards  of  300  Figures ;  but  they  being  chiefly  colleded  from  Willoughby,  a 
Compiler  muft  look  cautioufly  on  him ;  what  new  Birds  he  has  worthy  of  any  No¬ 
tice  are  from  Mr.  Dandridge's  Collodion,  the  Originals  of  which  I  have  feen,  and 
could  wifh  Albin's  Copies  after  them  had  been  better ;  for  what  is  well  done  after 
Nature  itfelf  will  be  always  valuable.  Albin  has  given  fome  Draughts  of  Birds,  which, 
he'  fays,  were  from  Sir  Phomas  Lovother's  Collodion,  but  I  am  very  doubtful  as  to 
them,  they  being  taken  from  Drawings  done  by  fome  very  mean  Performer,  which 
Alhm  has  not  thought  proper  to  confefs.  By  Accident  I  happened  to  meet  with 
fome  of  thefe  Drawings,  which  has  confirmed  me  in  the  Truth  of  what  1  fay. 
The  Natural  Hiftories  we  have  had  in  E77gland,  till  of  late  Years,  are  moftly  Tranfla- 
tiens  from  other  Languages,  which  has  rendered  the  Underftanding  of  them  fome- 
what  difficult  j  for  I  believe  it  altogether  impradicable  to  make  a  Tranflation  run  fo 
fmooth  and  intelligible  as  the  Original  from  which  one  tranflates,  without  loofing  a 
good  Deal  of  the  true  Senfe  and  Meaning  of  its  Author  :  This  we  daily  difeover  in 
Tranflators,  who  are  forced,  in  fome  particular  Parts,  to  give  the  Words  of  the  firfl; 
Author  in  the  Margin,  becaufe  they  cannot  be  intelligibly  rendered  in  the  Language 
of  the  Tranflator  j  fo  that  being  in  its  original  Language  is  always  an  Advantage  to 
a  Book,  becaufe  Tranflations  mud  neceflarily,  at  leafi:  in  fome  fmall  Degree,  give 
the  Readers  of  them  different  Ideas  from  the  Originals :  This  Book  hath  the  Advan¬ 
tage  to  be  Original  in  its  Figures,  as  well  as  its  Deferiptions ;  not  one  of  the  former 
being  copied  from  others,  or  the  latter  either  tranflated  or  tranferibed* 

Wg 


{  III  ) 

We  are  much  deceived  by  People  who  drew  Foreign  Birds  and  Beads ;  for  they,  to 
make  them  feem  more  rare,  often  pretend  them  to  be  Natives  of  Places  very  didant 
and  unknown,  by  which,  not  only  the  ignorant,  but  fometimes  the  more  knowing, 
are  deceived  j  and,  to  drike  us  with  Surprize,  they  pretend  that  to  be  a  fierce,  favage 
and  untameabie  Creature,  which  in  its  real  Nature  is  very  gentle  and  harmlefs.  From 
fuch  Impofitions  proceeds  the  vulgar  Opinion,  that  the  Forciipine  is  a  fierce  Bead, 
and  that  it  can  kill  by  diooting  its  Quills,  tho’  indeed  he  is  a  Bead  of  the  more  gen¬ 
tle  and  harmlefs  Kind.  I  believe  there  are  few  obferving  People,  that  are  any  Ways 
curious,  but  mud  have  detected  fome  of  their  Cheats.  Many  African  Birds  have 
got  the  Name  of  Americans  amongd  us,  becaufe  they  generally  come  to  us  from  the 
We fl -Indies  \  they  being  fird  brought  thither  from  Africa  in  Ships,  who  trade  in 
Negroe  Slaves,  and  prefented  by  Captains  to  Governors  and  Planters  in  America^ 
from  whom  they  are  often  fent  into  England  as  Prefents  to  the  Nobility,  and  our 
London  Merchants,  without  mentioning  their  being  Natives  of  Africa^  by  which 
Midake  many  Birds  are  alTerted  to  be  Natives  of  Countries  where  they  were  not 
bred.  Therefore,  fince  it  is  not  always  pofiible  to  gain  fuch  full  and  perfect  Ac¬ 
counts  as  one  could  wifh,  I  think  no  Man  diould  be  difcouraged  from  publidiing 
Accounts  of  natural  Things,  becaufe  he  cannot  give  fo  full  an  Account  of  them  as 
he  defireth  ;  for  it  is  enough  in  a  faithful  Author,  if  he  can  give  but  a  tolerable  Ac¬ 
count  of  Things  which  we  have  not  heard  of  before,  or  a  clearer  Hidory  of  Things 
we  have  yet  known  but  obfcurely,  which  may  give  a  later  Searcl]ier  Opportunity  to  dif- 
cover  Things  more  perfectly ;  for  it  is  altogether  impofiible  in  many  Cafes,  at  fird, 
to  come  to  the  Knowledge  of  Things  in  all  their  particular  Circumdances.  It  is  the 
Work  of  fome  only  to  hint  to  us  what  there  is  in  Nature,,,  barely  by  Names;  and  of 
others,  to  fearch  a  little  farther,  and  give  fome  tolerable  Account  of  them,  which 
may  enable  others,  who  come  after,  to  attain  a  more  perfedl  Knowledge  of  Things, 
who  perhaps  would  never  have  bufied  themfelves  about  them,  had  they  not  received 
their  fird  Hints  from  Authors  far  more  dark  than  themfelves.  In  natural  Produc¬ 
tions  we  often  meet  with  rare  Things  brought  from  didant  Parts  of  the  World, 
Vv^hich  have  lain  in  Obfcurity,  unreguarded  by  any  knowing  Perfon,  till  it  is  forgotten 
from  whence  they  w^ere  produced :  When  fuch  Things  are  difcovered,  I  think  it 
better  to  preferve  Figures  and  Defcriptions  of  them,  than  to  let  them  fink  in  Oblivion, 
to  which  they  were  hadening  ;  becaufe,  when  we  certainly  know  that  thefe  Things 
fubfid  fomewhat  in  Nature,  the  Curiofity  of  fome  will  be  incited  to  enquire  after 
them,  in  order  to  make  more  full  Difcoveries.  Sir  Francis  Bacon  has  left  us  fome- 
thing  in  his  Advancement  of  Learning,  pointing  out  the  Means  of  improving  Science, 
(which  is,  I  think,  fuitable  to  our  prefent  Argument)  in  the  following  Lines  : 
“  Thofe  Things  are  to  be  held  pofiible,  which  may  be  done  by  fome  Perfon,  tho’ 
“  not  by  every  one  ;  and  which  may  be  done  by  many,  though  not  by  any  one  ;  and 
“  which  may  be  done  in  SuccelTion  of  Ages,  though  not  within  the  Hour-Glafs  of 
“  one  Man’s  Life ;  and  which  may  be  done  by  publick  Defignation,  though  not  by 

private  Endeavour.” 

The  Gravings  of  thefe  Figures  lie  under  fome  Difadvantage,  becaufe,  till  of  late 
Years,  I  had  no  Knowledge  in  Etching,  or  Ingraving  :  My  Strokes  in  Shadowing  being 
not  fo  clofeiy  nor  evenly  layed,  as  they  are  in  Works  performed  by  Maders  in  the 

Art 


{  II2  ) 

Art  of  Ingraving  j  yet,  by  doing  them  myfelf,  I  have  retained  in  the  Prints  fomePer- 
fedions,  which  would  have  been  wanting,  had  I  given  my  original  Draughts  to  Ingra¬ 
vers  to  copy,  for  they  often,  through  Want  of  a  juft  Underftanding  of  the  Meaning 
of  thofe  who  give  them  the  firft  Draughts,  go  a  little  from  the  Author’s  Deligns, 
and  will  take  fome  little  Bends  and  Turns  of  Strokes  for  the  Lapfe  of  a  Pencil,  which 
they  will,  as  they  fuppofe,  corred,  which  fometimes  robs  a  Figure  of  what  the  Au¬ 
thor  defigned  as  its  chiefeft,  diftinguifhing  Mark ;  fo  that  it  is,  in  fome  Sort,  better, 
that  the  original  Defigner  works  fuch  Drawings  on  Copper  himfelf ;  becaufe  a  Man 
cannot  fo  eaftly  go  from  his  own  Meaning  in  copying,  as  a  fecond  Perfon  may  mif- 
take  him :  Befidcs  the  Diftindions  in  the  extreme  Parts  of  Birds,  fuch  as  the  Bills, 
and  Feet,  and  other  Parts,  in  fome  particular  Species,  depend  on  fuch  little  Niceties, 
that  it  is  hard  for  one,  not  vcifed  in  the  Nature  of  thefe  ^Things,  to  keep  up  to  a 
due  Obfervation  and  Diftindion  of  them,  in  copying  from  Drawings,  which  ought 
to  be  extremely  exad,  becaufe  it  is  altogether  impoflible  for  a  Defcription  to  give  fo 
juft  an  Idea  of  Figures,  as  Lines  which  precifely  exprefs  the  Things  you  treat  of.  I 
have  been  particularly  careful  in  the  extreme  Parts  of  the  Figures,  to  compare  and  ad- 
juft  the  Draughts  on  the  Copper  with  the  original  Drawings  from  which  they  were 
taken,  and  many  of  the  Plates  were  diredly  worked  from  Nature  itfelf,  which  is  an 
Advantage  that  few  Works  of  this  Kind  have  had.  I  have  been  fcrupuloufly  care¬ 
ful  to  keep  the  Forms  of  the  Bills,  nothing  fo  much  diftinguiftiing  the  particular 
Kinds  as  this ;  for  bending  an  arched  Bill  a  very  little  too  fuddenly,  or  carrying  it  but 
little  more  on  a  Straight,  gives  the  Bill  quite  a  different  Charader,  In  fome  rare  Birds, 
which  I  was  forced  to  reduce  by  Reafon  of  their  Bignefs,  I  have  at  the  Bottoms  of 
the  Plates  figured  the  Bills  of  their  natural  Size,  the  better  to  exprefs  fome  Singula¬ 
rities  I  obferved  in  them. 

I  have  not  always  copied  fervilely  after  the  Draughts  which  I  defigned  from  Na¬ 
ture,  becaufe  fome  of  thefe  were  drawn  from  dead  Subjeds,  in  which  I  could  not 
confider  the  various  Adions  and  Geftures  of  them  when  living ;  yet,  after  having 
made  Drawings,  wherein  I  had  taken  juftly  their  Parts  and  Colourings,  I  had  frequent 
Opportunity  of  feeing  thefe  fame  Birds,  or  Birds  of  the  like  Genus,  from  which  I 
iketched  Out-lines,  as  I  had  Opportunity  in  my  Vifits  to  curious  Gentlemen  in  the 
Neighbourhood  of  Lojidon.  Many  of  thefe  Out-lines  I  have  made  ufe  of,  in  order 
to  amend  my  firft  Drawings,  becaufe  fome  of  them  were  only  from  dead  Birds : 
Thefe  later  Sketches  have  helped  me  much  to  put  Birds  into  their  natural  Attitudes, 
by  which  Means  this  Work  is  more  perfed  than  it  could  otherwife  have  been.  I 
cannot  fay  all  of  them  have  received  the  fame  Advantage,  there  being  many  rare  and 
tender  Birds,  which  will  not  bear  Sea- Voyages,  brought  various  Ways,  preferved, 
to  fatisfy  the  Curiofity  of  thefe  Times. 

When  I  have  met  with  any  of  thefe,  I  have  carefully  examined  the  Notes  which 
diftinguifh  the  different  Tribes  of  Birds,  and  have  put  them  in  Adions  common  to 
fuch  Birds  as  they  feem  neareft  to  agree  with  in  their  Natures,  from  my  Obfervation 
in  Living  Birds.  'Dne  is  fomewhat  conftrained  in  Natural  Hiftory,  having  only  one 
Figure  of  each<^Species,  to  keep  to  fuch  Attitudes  in  Figures  as  will  fhew  all  their 
principal  Parts^and  Colours  treated  of  ;  otherwife  the  Figures  and  Defcriptions  together 
would  notibe-^fo  agreeable  to  fome  Readers.  Therefore  many  fuch  Adions,  Turns, 


(  “3  ) 

and  Fore-Shoftenlngs,  which  make  up  the  agreeable  Variety  of  mafterly  Compof  tion.', 
muft  be  avoided,  lead  they  hide  what  is  mod  confpicuous  in  the  natural  Defcriptions. 

On  impartially  examining  the  Drawings  of  the  Figures  in  this  fecond  Part,  and 
comparing  them  with  other  Works  of  this  Kind,  I  cannot  charge  myfelf  with  falling 
fhort  of  any  Thing  publilhed  of  late  Years  on  Birds  :  But,  lead  a  natural  Fondnels  of 
one’s  own  Offspring  fhould  prompt  me  to  go  beyond  what  others  may  think  Truth, 
I  would  have  every  one  endeavour,  either  to  difprove  or  confirm  the  Truth  of  what 
I  fay,  fo  often  as  he  has  Opportunity  to  compare  thefe  Figures  with  Nature  itfelf.  I 
fpeak  here  in  Relation  to  Figures  only;  for,  as  to  Elegancy  of  Stile  in  Writing,  I 
muft  give  Place  to  many.  In  colouring  after  Nature  one  fhould  be  careful  that  the 
Lights  be  not  made  too  light,  efpecially  where  Subjedls  are  of  dark  Colours,  becaufe 
it  may  deceive  thofe  who  we  defign  to  inform,  by  making  them  believe  thofc 
Subjeds  are  lighter  colour’d  than  they  really  are  in  Nature,  every  indifferent 
Judge  not  considering,  that  an  Artift  cannot  ^xprefs  the  Fullnefs  of  Light  and  Sha¬ 
dow  in  a  Picture,  as  they  appear  in  natural  Objeds :  For  Example,  what  Man  can 
exprefs  the  Fullnefs  of  a  Shadow  in  an  Objed  that  is  wholly  Black;  for  the  Paper 
or  Canvafs  the  Objed  is  drawn  on,  miift  be  expofed  to  a  good  Light  to  fnew  it  advan- 
tageoufly  to  the  Eye,  by  which  Means  the  blacked:  Shadow  one  can  make  will  ap-^ 
pear  as  light  as  the  highefl  Light  of  the  fame  black  Objed  placed  in  the  fame  Degree 
of  Light ;  fo  that  we  are  conftrained  to  raife  our  Lights  in  fuch  Objeds  fomething 
above  their  Appearance  in  Nature,  otherwife  all  would  be  flat;  for  as  we  cannot 
make  the  Shadows  fo  dark  as  they  appear  in  Nature  (Shadows  in  Painting  being  ex¬ 
pofed  to  a  ftrong  Light)  fo  confequently  our  Lights  muft  be  lighter  than  they  appear 
in  Nature,  that  there  may  be  the  fame  Proportion  between  Light  and  Shadow  in  Pic¬ 
tures  as  there  is  in  natural  Objeds ;  but  an  Excefs  of  Light  ought  to  be  avoided, 
otl^rwife  in  Painting  a  black  Objed,  we  may  give  the  Beholder  rather  an  Idea  of 
Grey.  In  painting  Objeds  perfedly  white,  you  have  not  the  Advantage  of  raiflng 
your  Lights  above  what  your  natural  Objed  prefents,  fo  that  in  Pidures  there  cannot 
Idc  fo  great  a  Difference  between  dark,  and  light  Objeds,  as  in  natural  Bodies :  Thi^ 
Way  of  Reafoning  in  Relation  to  Painting  might  be  carried  to  a  great  Length.  I  for¬ 
merly  imagined  it  poflible,  by  the  higheft  Perfedion  in  the  Art  of  Painting,  to  de¬ 
ceive  the  Eye,  by  performing  what  might  be  taken  for  Nature ;  but,  fince  I  hit  on 
the  above  Reafons,  I  plainly  difeover  it  to  be  impradicable.  I  have  obferved,  that 
rude  Scene  Paintings  in  Theatres  are  more  deceptive  than  more  finiflied  Works,  but 
this  proceeds  from  the  Diftance  and  Lamp  Light  in  which  we  view  them. 

It  is  obfervable,  that  there  are  Birds  peculiar  to  fome  particular  Trads  of  Land, 
which  will  not  propagate  or  fpread  themfelves  into  other  Countries,  tho’  in  the  fame 
Latitude,  and  on  the  fame  Ifland,  by  which  they  might  very  eafily  extend  themfelves, 
if  one  particular  Place  had  not  fomething  in  it,  unknown  to  us,  which  caufes  them  to 
continue  where  they  are.  To  Inftance  one  amongft  many,  by  Way  of  Example, 
the  Comijh  Choughy  or  Coracias  of  Aldro'vand,  is  faid  by  Mr.'  Willoughby^  in  liis  Orni¬ 
thology,  to  breed  on  the  Clefts  and  Rocks  of  Cornwal,  and  on  the  Coafts  of  Wales, 
and  all  the  Weftern  Coafts  of  England.  Yet  I  cannot  learn  that  there  are  any  of 
them  on  the  Southern  Coafts  of  England  to  the  Eaftward  of  Devonjlsire,  nor  on  any 
Part  of  the  Eaftern  Coafts ;  tho’  thefe  are  in  parallel  Latitudes  to  the  Weftern  Coafts 

R  wlierc 


■(  II4  ) 

Vv/here  thefe  Birds  abound,  and  the  Coafls  in  many  Places  have  Clefts  and  RockV 
ieemingly  as  convenient  for  them  to  breed  in  as  any  on  the  Weftern  Coafls  of  Eng-^ 
land.  I  have  alfo  obferved  the  Hen  Birds  of  a  great  Number  of  Species  to  be  of  a 
Brown  or  Clayey  Colour,  where  the  Cocks  of  the  fame  Species  are  covered  with  beauti¬ 
ful  colour’d  Feathers  of  a,  very  great  Luflre  :  It  is  very  obfervable  in  the  Eiick  Kind, , 
that  the  Males  are  mofl  of  them  remarkable  for  beautiful  Colours,  and  the  Females, „ 
almofl  all  of  them,  of  Brownifh  or  Earthy  Colours.  We  may  remark  the  fame  Thing 
in  many  Land  Birds,  as  the  PeacGck^  who  is  remarkable  for  fhining  Colours,  whereas 
the  Hen  is  of  a  dirty  Brown,  with  little  or  no  Luflre.  The  fame  Difference  may  be 
obferved  between  the  Males  and  Females  of  all  the  Pheafant  Kind^  and  of  many 
other  Tribes  of  Birds,  This  Difference  feems  to  proceed  from  a  providential  Defigti  • 
of  Nature  ^  feeing  the  Hen  Birds,  when  they  hatch  their  Young,  fit  on  the  Earth, 
and  are  many  of  them  expofed  to  the  open  Sky,  to  the  View  of  noxious  Beafls  and 
Birds  of  Prey,  which  would  prefently  difcover  them,  were  they  of  glaring  Colours 
much  differing  from  the  Earth  on  which  they  fit ;  but  by  being  of  an  Earthy  Colour, 
and  drawing  their  Heads  clbfe  to  their  Bodies,  they  appear  like  rude.  Clods  of^Earth, 
and  deceive  the  Eyes  both  of  Man  and  •  Beafl,  by  which'  Means  they  are  preferved 
from  Deflrudion. 

If  Travellers  would  be  at  a  little  Expence  of  Thought  and  Labour,  I  believe  we 
might  come  to  fome  tolerable  Knowledge  in  Relation  to  the  Paffage  of,  Birds,  which 
is  now  very  obfcure  to  us.  In  order  to  forward  fuch  Knowledge,  Lfhall  here  point 
out  fuch  Authors  as  have  faid  any  Thing  on  that  Subjedl,  and  join  to  them  fuch  little.. 
Obfervations  as  I  have  made.  There  was  publifhed  fomc  Years  ago  by  Mr.  Charles.: 
Morton,  without  Date,  and  ffnee  republifhed  in  the  Harleian  Mifccllany,  Vol.  IL  . 
Page  558..  an  ingenious,  tho’>  I  think  chimerical.  Account  of  the  Paffage  of  Birds, 
which  fuppofes  them  to  -  go  to  the  Moon,  or  fome  invifible  aerial  Ifland  fixed  above  . 
our  Atmofphere,  with  fome  other  fuch  like  Conjedlures.  Dr.  in  his  Travels, 
or  Obfervations  on  6cc.  has  given  us  fome  Light  as  to  the  Paflage  of  the 

Stork,  which  I  fliall  here  borrov/  from  him.  Page  428.  ‘‘  The  Ibis,  that  was  once 

known  to  every  Family  [in  Egypt'\  is  now  become  exceeding  rare,  tho’  the  Want 
“  of  it  is  fufficiently  fupplied  by  the  Stork-,  for,  befides  a  great  Number  of  thefe  Birds, 
that  might  undoubtedly  efcape  my  Notice,  I  faw  in  the  Middle  of  April  (1722) 
(our  Ship  lying  then  at  Anchor  under  Mount  Carmel)  three  Flights  of  them,  each  . 
*■*  of  which  took  up  more  than  three  Hours  in  pafling  by  us,  extending  themfelves  at 
the  fame  Time  more  than  half  a  Mile  in  Bfeadth ; .  they  were  then  leaving  Egypt 
(where  the  Canals  and  Ponds,  that  are  annually  left  by  the  Nile,  were  become 
dry)  and  diredled  themfelves  towards  N.  E.  It  is  obferved  of  the  Storks,  that  for . 
“  about  the  Space  of  a  Fortnight  before  they  pafs  from  one  Country  to  another,  they 
“  conflantly  refort  together,  from  all  the  circumjacent  Parts,  to  a.  certain  Plain,  and 
there  forming  themfelves  once  every  Day  ihto.a  Dou-wanhe  (according  to  the  Phrafe 
of  the  People)  and  are  faid  ,to  determine  the  exadt  Time  of  their  Departure,  and 
the  Places  of  their  future  Abodes  Thofe  that  Sequent  the  Marfhes  of  Barbary 
“  appear  about  three  Weeks  fboner  than  the  Flights  above-mentioned  were  obferv- 
“  ed  to  do,  tho’  they  likewife  are  fuppofed  to  come  from  Egypt,  whither  alfo  they 
return  a  little  after  the  Autumnal  Equinox,  the  Nile  being  then  retired  within 


(  ”5  ) 

"  its  Banks,  and  the  Country  in  a  proper  Difpofition  to  fupply  them  with  Nourifh- 
ment :  No  lefs  extraordinary  are  thofe  Flights  of  Pigeons^  that  have  been  obferved 
in  New-England^  and  other  Parts  of  America^  I  think  what  is  faid  by  Dr. 
Shaw,  in  the  above  Quotation  is  fufficient  to  convince  any  one,  that  the  Stork  is  a 
conftant  Inhabitant  of  this  World,  and  that  it  only  pafles  from  one  Part  of  its  Super¬ 
ficies  to  another  at  certain  Seafons,  the  better  to  accommodate  itfelf  with  a  temperate 
Climate,  and  proper  Food  :  Thofe  that  leave  Egypt  in  Aprils  and  dire<5l  their  Courfe 
North-Eafi:,  are,  I  fuppofe,  what  appear  in  Germany^  and  the  Low  Countries^  all  the 
Summer,  A  North-Eafi:  Dired:ion  from  Egypt  carries  them  along  the  Coafi:  of  Judaay 
for  its  whole  Length  ;  from  whence  ’tis  likely  they  go  diredly  North,  acrofs  Natolia^ 
and  pafs  by  the  Eafi:  End  of  the  Black  Sea,  by  which  Means  they  have  Land  in 
View  through  the  Courfe  of  their  w^hole  Journey ;  when  they  have  pafied  by  the 
Black  Sea,  the  firm  Lands-  of  Europe  and  ^a  to  the  North  are  open  before  them, 
fo  that  they  may  take  their  Courfe  to  the  Places  of  their  deftined  Habitations.  I  fup¬ 
pofe  they  do  not '"breed  in  Egypt,  SmcQ  Dr.  Shaw  hTith.  not  mentioned  it  5  *but  I 
imagine  that  all  Birds  of  Paflage  go  Northward  to  breed,  and  retire  Southward  to¬ 
ward  Winter,  that  is,  of  fuch  Birds  as  inhabit  on  this  Side  the  Equinodtial  Line  j 
for,  I  fuppofe,  that  what  Birds  of  Pafiage  there  are,  that  continue  always  to  the 
South  of  the  Equinodtial,  go  toward  the  Southern  Pole  in  the  Summer  of  that  Part  of 
the  World,  and  retire  toward  the  Equinodrial  Line  at  the  Approach  of  their  Winter. 
Yet,  I  believe,  the  Stork  breeds  in  fome  Parts  of  the  World  as  far  South  as  Egypt, 
though  perhaps  the  Climate  may  be  cooler,  becaufe  of  its  high  Situation.  For  Le 
Bruyn  in  hh'TvdiVth  Into  Mtifcovy,  Perfta,  &c.  tells  us,  that  oiv  the  Tops  of -the  tall 
Pillars  in  the  Ruins  of  Perfepolis  he  obferved  Storks  Nefts,  on  fome  of  them  oneNefi, 
on  others  tv/o,-  Storks  that  pafs  to  the  Northward  of  the  Weft  from  E^pt 

to  the  Northern  Cdafts  of  Barbary,  I 'fuppofe  breed  there,  becaufe  they  continue 
there  all  the  Summer  according  to  Dr.  Shaw's  Account. 

I  fuppofe  thofe  Storks  that  vifit  the  Northern  Parts  of  Barbary  never  pafs  over  the 
Mediterranean  Sea  into  Spain,  or  France,  becaufe  we  have  no  Account  of  their  be¬ 
ing  found  there  at  any  Time  of  the  Year.  Thefe  Countries  may  be.  Tor  fome  Caufe 
unknown  to  us,  not  adopted  to"  their  Nature.  I  am  not  of  the  vulgar  Opinion,  that 
they  ayoid  thefe  Lands,  becaufe  their  Governments  are  Monarchical.  The  Stork 
is,  I  believe,  the  largefi  Bird  of  Pafiage  we  have  in  Europe ;  it  is  known  by  its 
Flight,  and  taken  more  Notice  of  than  fmaller  Birds  of  Pafilrge  :  If  any  knowing 
Perfons,  who  travel,  ..would  make  pa’'ticular  Obfervations  on  the  fmaller  Kind  of 
Birds,  when  they  pafs  to  and  from  particular  Countries,  I  believe  we  fhould  foon 
gain- a  tolerable  Knowledge  in  the  Paflage  of  the  fmaller  Bird's,  and  afcertain  the 
Places  of  many  of  their  Habitations  in  all  Parts  of  the  Year.  To  illuftrate  the  Hif- 
tory  of  the  Pelican,  I  lliall  add  a  Quotation  from  Dr.  Shaw’s  Supplement  to  his 
Travels  or  Obfervations,  &c.  Page  89,  which  is  as  follows. 

“  The  Omcrotalus,  another  noted  Bird  of  the  Nile,  is  likewife  called  the  Pelican , 
“  the  remarkable  large  Pouch  or  Bag,  that  is  fufpended  from  the  Bill  of  this  Bird, 
ferves,  not  only  as  a  Repofitory  for  its  Food,  but  as  a  Net  likewife  wherewithal 
“  to  catch  it}  and  it  may  be  further  obferved,  that  in  feeding  its  young  Ones  (whe- 
“  ther  this  Bag  be  loaded  with  Water  or  Fifli)  the  Omcrotalus  icynttzts  \\it  Con- 

tent 


(  x>6  ') 

^  tents  of  it  into  their  Mouths,  by  ftrongly  compreffing  .it  with  the  Bill  upon  its 
Breallj  an  Action  which  might  well  give  Occafion  to  the  received  Tradition,  and 
Report,  that  the  Pelicany  in  feeding  her  Young,  pierced  Rer  own  Bread,  and  nou- 
“  rifhed  them  with  her  Blood.” 

The  Reverend  Mr.  'Durand^  F.  R,  .S.  has.  obliged  me  with  an  Obfervation  on  the 
Paifage  of  Birds,  which  he  himfelf  made  in  Spaitiy  which  is  as  follows  :  “  I  can  aver, 
‘‘  that  being  in  in  ijojynn  the  Kingdom  of  Valencia^  upon  the  Sea  Coaft,  a 
“  little  Way  from  Cajlillo?!  de  la.  Plane.,  I  faw  in  OBober  great  Flocks  of  Birds  coming 
“  from  Africa,  in  a  dired  Line  from .  the  South fome  of  them,  being  fhot,  were 
“  found  to  be  Pkrupes  \Grhes]  but  fo  dry  and  lean,  that  they  had  little  Subftance  or 
“  Tafte  ;  the  People  of  the  Counti:y  told  me,  that  they  came  every  Year  at  the  fame 
Seafon  in  Flocks,  but  that  the  greateft  Part  of  them  go  on  farther ;  they  grow  fat 
in  &ivit'zerkind  by  feeding  on  Juniper  Berries,  and  are  delicious  all  the  Winter 
“  long.” 

The  above  Paragraph  of  Mr.  Durand  feems  to  contradid  my  Opinion,  relating  to 
.the  Paflage  of  Birds;  but  though  thefe  Phriifhes  come  from  the  South  to  the  Coaft  of 
Valencia,  I  do  .  not  think  it  a  certain  Argument,  that  they  come  from  Africa  ;  for  to 
me  it  feems  contrary  to  Reafon  to  imagine,  that  after  Birds  have  lived  in  the  Sum- 
.mer  Heats  of  Africa,  they  ftiould  go  to  Spain,  and  on  farther  Northward,  to  fuftain 
the  Gold  of  a  Winter,  in  a  Country  fo  far  North  of  their  Summer  Habitation  ;  for  it 
is  generally  believed,  that  Birds  pafs,  in  order  to  attain  Habitations  of  near  the  fame 
'Temperature  with  thofe  Countries  they  come  from;  now,  feeing  the  Sea-Coaft  of  Va¬ 
lencia  lies  North  and  South,  an  eafterly  Diredion  only  can  bring  thefe  Birds  from  the 
Sea.  Now,  I  fuppofe,  that  when  Birds  depart  from  their  Summer  Habitations,  they 
-gather  into  great  Flocks,  and  have  a  certain  Courfe  to  dired  themfelves  in  ;  and  that 
in  their  greateft  Rout  they  may  fly  fo  high,  as  to  be  out  of  Sight  j  and,  when  they 
have  arrived  at  the  Place  of  their  Winter’s  Habitation,  they  may  feparate  into  leflfer 
.Flocks,  in  order  to  cover  fome  large  Country  ;  thefe  lefler  Flocks  may  tend  to  every 
Point  of  the  Compafs ;  after  this  they  may  feparate,  and  difperfe  themfelves  flnglj, 
in  order  the  better  to  accommodate  themfelves  with  Food,  and  fcatter  themfelves  all 
over  a  Country :  So  that  I  fuppofe,  that  the  Birds  Mr.  Durand  mentions  might  come 
from  the  moft  Northern  Parts  of  Europe,  and  a  great  Part  of  them  in  their  Paflage 
turn  a  little  to  the  Weft,  through  France,  and  into  Spain,  and  when  arrived  about 
.Granada,  in  the  South  of  Spam,  might  feparate  into  Parties,  the  better  to  occupy  the 
..whole  Country ;  fo  that  Part  of  them  might  return  a  little  Way  Northward,  along 
the  Coafts  of  Murcia  and  Valencia,  and  afterwards  fpread  themfelves  into  the  Inlands. 
.1  think  this  Opinion  no  Way  contradids  what  Mr.  Durand  has  faid;  what  is  mentioned 
of  thefe  Birds  feeding  and  growing  fat  in  Switzerland  doth  not  belong  to  this  Quef- 
.tion,  for  it  cannot  be  known,  that  they  are  Part  of  the  Flocks  feen  pafling  on  the 
Coaft  of  Vakficia. 

There  was  publiflied  Atato  1745,  in  lamo.  A  new  general  Hiftory  of  Birds,  with 
wooden  Cuts,  by  J.  Osborn,  in  Pater-nofter-Row,  Lo?idon ;  the  Author  anonymous  : 
In  the  Article  of  the  Swallow  there  is  colleded  feveral  Obfervations  on,  and  Accounts 
of,  the  Paflfage  of  Birds,  from  good  Authors ;  ^his  may  dired  the  Curious  to  examine 
the  Authors  therein  mentioned. 


Dr. 


(  ”7  ) 

Dr.  Shaw^  in  his  fore-mentioned  Work,  Page  253,  fays,  “  the  Woodcock  makes  its 

firft  Appearance  in  OBober^  and  continueth  till  March  following  :  The  Africans 
“  call  it  yHammarel  Hadiel]  the  Afs  of  the  Partridges,"  Since  no  Account  tells  us 
where  the  Woodcock  goes  in  Summer,  I  am  of  Opinion,  that  they  retire  to  the  Nor¬ 
thern  and  unfrequented  Parts  of  the  World  to  breed  :  The  above  Account  fhews,  that 
they  fpread  themfelves  far  Southward  in  the  Winter. 

I  have  difcovered,  that  there  are  many  Birds  common  both  to  the  old  World  and 
America :  I  faw  lately  brought  from  Hndfon's-Bay  a  Bird,  under  the  Name  of  a  S?70w 
Bird,  which,  they  fay,  is  one  of  the  firfl  that  appears  in  the  Spring,  while  the 
Snow  is  yet  on  the  Ground  :  On  fhridfly  examining  this  Bird,  I  found  it  to  be  the  great 
Pied-Mountain  Pinch ^  or  Br amblings  defcribed  in  Willoughby^ s  Ornithology,  Page  255; 
befides  this,  I  have  received  from  North- America  the  Red-Legg'd  Horfeman^  or  To- 
tanoy  defcribed  in  Willoughby^  Page  299;  the  Bald  Coot  defcribed.  Page  319,  and  the 
Crofs-Bill,  or  Loxia^  defcribed  Page  248,  of  the  fame  Author :  Thefe  are  all  Birds 
found  in  Europe^  as  well  as  in  America ;  two  of  them,  viz,  the  Crofs-Bilh  and  the 
Pied-Mounfain  Fmchy  are  fmall  Land  Birds  j  I  have  alfo  received  from  America  the 
little  Bird  we  call  the  Golden-Crown' d  Wren.  There  are  many  of  the  Water-Fowls, 
that  frequent  the  Northern  Parts  of  the  World,  found  both  in  Europe  and  America ; 
the  white  Partridge^  or  Lagopus  Avis,  is  found  in  No7'th- America,  as  well  as  in  Eu¬ 
rope.  Mr.  Catesby,  in  his  Hiftory  of  Carolina,  &c.  has  particularifed  many  Birds, 
that  he  obferved  to  be  Inhabitants  both  of  America  and  Europe.  I  do  not  wonder  to 
find  that  Birds,  who  breed  on  the  Sea  Shores,  and  make  long  Flights  over  the  Sea  in 
the  Northern  Parts,  fhould  be,  indifferently.  Inhabitants  both  of  the  New  and  Old 
W orlds,  becaufe  we  know  that  toward  the  North  Pole  the  Continents  of  Europe  and 
America  are  very  near  to  one  another,  and  may,  for  ought  we  know,  join  near  the 
Pole.  We  muft  fuppofe  that  thefe  Birds  have  palled  from  America  to  Europe,  or  from 
Europe  to  America  j  or  that  there  were  created,  at  firft.  Birds  of  the  felf-fame  Species 
in  both  thefe  Parts  of  the  World,  which,  according  to  my  Way  of  Reafoning,  can¬ 
not  be  fuppofed.  Moft  of  the  World  agree,  that  each  Species  fprung  from  an  origi¬ 
nal  fingle  Pair  :  But  it  feems  more  eafy  to  conceive  how  the  Northern  Water-Fowl 
fhould  inhabit  all  the  Northern  Parts  of  the  World,  than  to  imagine  how  fmall  Land 
Birds,  and  fome  greater  Fowls  of  fhort  Flight,  fuch  as  the  white  Partridge,  fhould 
be  able  from  one  and  the  fame  Original  to  propagate  itfelf  in  Europe  and  America.. 

I  cannot  think  thefe  fmall  Birds,  ^c.  can  fpread  themfelves  from  any  Part  of  Europe 
Weftward,  becaufe  we  know  that  there  are  wide  Seas  between  Europe  and  America, 
which  reach  pretty  near  the  North  Pole,  in  Countries  where  few  or  no  Land  Birds 
are  found,  even  in  the  Summer :  Therefore  I  imagine,  that  they  have  found  a  Way 
Eaftward  from  Tartary.  We  cannot  indeed  fay  there  is  a  commodious  Paflage  that 
Way,  fince  Japan  in  Afia,  and  California  in  America,  are  the  neareft  Lands  to  each 
other  that  we  certainly  know  of,  which  however  are  at  a  very  great  Difiance  :  Yet  we 
know  not  but  there  may  be  Illands,  or  extended  Continent,  between  thefe  Lands 
fomething  to  the  Northward,  that  may  join,  or  nearly  join,  Afia  and  America:  I 
think  our  finding  fmall  Land  Birds  of  the  fame  individual  Species  in  both  Parts  of 
the  World  is  a  probable  Reafon  for  this  Opinion.  I  cannot  help  thinking,  that  Ame¬ 
rica  was  alfo  peopled  with  the  human  Species  from  Ajia  Eallward,  What  has  con- 

S  firmed 


■  (  ii8  ) 

firmed  me  in  this  Opinion  is  a  Defcription  of  the  Samoeds  [Man-Eaters]  to  the  Nortli- 
Eafh  of  Archangel  in  RuJJia  :  See  Le  Bruyn's  Travels  into  Mufcovy,  Perjia,  &c.  VoL  I. 
Page  6.  Le  Bruyn  was  bred  a  Limner,,  and  has  been  at  the  Pains  to  figure  a  Head  of 
one  of  the  Samoeds  in  Large,,  on  a  Folio  Page,  which  gives  every  one  that  has  feen 
any  of  the  North- American  People  a  perfect  Idea  of  them. 

The  whole  Account  of  their  Habits,  Way  of  Living,  Cufioms,  and  Manners,  is 
fo  like  what  we  fee  in  Voyagers,  who  have  wrote  on  the  North  Americans^  that  they 
feem  almoft  the  fame.  I  have  feen  feveral  of  the  American  Chiefs  in  England,  and 
on  feeing  the  Samoed'%  Head  in  Le  Bruyn,  they  were  fo  ftrongly  reprefentcd  by  it, 
that  I  thought  it  had  been  a  Print  mifplaced  till  I  read  the  whole  Hiftory  of  thele 
People.  I  have  alfo  received  Prefents  of  Habits  from  Hudfo72[s-Bay  in  North-America, 
that  anfwer  the  Defcriptio-ns  Le  Bruyn  has  given  of  the  Habits  thefe  RuJJian  Savages 
are  cloathed  in,,  as  nearly  as  if  they  were  the  fame. 

In  my  Preface  to  the  firfi:  Part  of  this  Hiftory  I  have  mentioned  depofiting  a  Copy 
of  this  Book  in  the  Library  of  the  College  of  Phyficians,  London ;  and  here  I  think 
proper  to  let  the,  Publick  know,  that  I  defign  to  lodge  this  Hiftory  of  Birds  comr 
pleat,  and  juftly  coloured,  in  the  Library  of  the  Royal  Society,  both  which  Books 
may  hereafter  ferve  as  Standards  to  compare  others  with,  to  prove,  or  dilprove  the 
Juftnefs  of  their  Colouring :  I  fhall  alfo,  if  peaceable  Times  will  permit,  endeavour 
by  fome  Means  or  other  to  lodge  a  perfbdl  coloured  Copy  in  the  Library  of  the  Aca¬ 
demy  Royal  of  Sciences  at  Parts.  A  Point  of  Gratitude  obliges  me  to  prefent  this 
Book  to  the  Royal  Society,  lince  I  have  fo  many  Friends  among  that  Learned  and  Cu¬ 
rious  Body,  who  always  have  been  ready  and  willing  to  introduce  me  to  their  Meetings : 
I  have  been  farther  obliged,  in  a  more  Angular  Manner,  by  fome  of  the  principal 
Gentlemen  of  the  Royal  Society ;  for  not  only  their  late  Prefident,  but:  the  Preftr 
dent  now  being,  as  well  as  their  Treafurer,  and  feveral  other  Gentlemen  of  the  So¬ 
ciety,  very  willingly  and  freely  figned  my  Recommendation,  when  I  offered  myfelf 
a  Candidate  for  a  Fellowfhip  in  their  Society.  I  have,,  through  Itiadvertency,  com¬ 
mitted  an  Error  in  the  Preface  to  the  firft  Part  of  this  Book,  and  think  it  proper  here 
to  redify  it;  It  relates  to  the  Paffage  of  the  Deer-,  P  have  made  them  pafs  Northward 
in  the  Summer,  and  Southward  in  the  Winter  j  but  I  muft  quite  reverfe  this,  and 
make  them  pafs  Into  the  Northern  Parts  in  Winter,  and  Southward  in  the  Summer, 
and  it  will  be  right ;  fee  the  Paffage,  Page  xii.  of  the  Preface  to  the  firft  Part.  This 
makes  the  Thing  more  ftrange,  and  contrary  to  our  common  Way  of  Reafoning, 
than  it  feerns  to  be  in  the  erroneous  Account  ^  but  if  we  confider,  that  thefe  Deer  in 
the  Winter  are  cloathed  with  an  exceeding  thick  Covering,  which  falls  of,  and  leaves 
them  very  thinly  cloathed  in  the  Summer,  it  will  reconcile  this  Acconnt  a  little 
to  our  Reafon.  Arthur  Dobbs,  Efq.  has  remarked  their  Paffage  Northward  in  Winr 
ter,  and  Southward  in  Summer,  in  his  Account  and  Natural  Hiftory  of  Hudfon's- 
Bay. 

Since  I  fent  my  Defcriptions  to  the  Prefs,  I  have  feen  at  Sir  Dans  Sloane'^  a  very 
pompous  Natural  Hiftory,  finely  coloured,  publifhed  at  Amflerdam,  Anno  1734,  by 
Albertiis  Seba  ;  in  turning  it  over,  I  find  fome  Things  in  him  that  are  the  fame  with, 
fome  t  have  publiftied,  which  are  as  follows :  My  little  Indian  King-Fijhers,  Page  1,1. 
agree  with  his  Oriental  King-Fijher,  Vol.l.  Page  104.  My  Blue  Creeper,,  and  Goldeti- 

headed 


J 


(  119,1205121  ) 

Beaded  Black  T^it-Moufcy  Page  21,  are  his  Hoitzillirii  Vol.  1.  Page  97,  and  his  MexU 
tan  Chichiltofgtl,  Vol.  I.  Page  96.  My  Black-headed  Indian  Idlerus^  Page  77,  is  his 
Vcotzinitzcany  Vol.  1.  Page  97.  I  have  alfo,  I  believe,  two  or  three  Birds  of  Peti~ 
ver  figured  and  defcribed  in  Rays  Synopfis  Method.  Avium ;  but  his  Figures  are  fo 
mean,  and  the  Defcription  fo  very  brief,  that  I  can  determine  nothing  certain,  whe¬ 
ther  I  have  figured  them  or  not,  fo  I  fhall  not  point  them  out. 

-  For  the  Amufement  of  the  Curious  of  either  Sex,  and  to  fulfil  a  Promife  to  fomc 
particular  Ladies,  I  have  here  inferted  a  Receipt  of  the  Manner  of  making  Pictures 
of  Birds  with  their  Natural'  Feathers. 

Firfi;  take  a  thin  Board,  or  Pannel  of  Deal,  or  Wainfcot  well  feafoned,  that  it 
may  not  fhrink,  then  fmoothly  pafiie  on  it  white  Paper,  and  let  it  dry ;  and  if  the 
Wood  cafts  its  Colour  through,  you  may  pafie  on  a  fecond  Paper,  and  it  will  be 
whiter :  Let  the  fecond  Paper  dry,  then  get  ready  any  Bird  that  you  would  reprefent, 
and  draw  it  as  exa(9:  as  ma,y  be  on  your  paper’d  Pannel,  of  its  Natural  Size,  (middle- 
fized  Birds  are  beft  for  this  Work)  then  paint  what  Ground-work,  or  Tree,  or 
other  Thing,  you  defign  to  fet  your  Bird  on,  together  with  the  Bill  and  Legs  of  the 
Bird  in  Water-Colours,  leaving  the  Bird  to  be  covered  with  its  own  Natural  Fea¬ 
thers.  You  mufi;  firft  prepare  the  Part  to  be  feather’d,  by  laying  on  pretty  thick 
Gum  Arabic^  dilfolved  in  Water,  with  a  large  Hair  Pencil ;  then  lay  the  Pannel  fiat,  and 
let  it  dry  hard,  and  when  dry  cover  it  with  your  Gum-Water  a  fecond  Time,  and  let  it 
dry,  and  then  a  third,  in  cafe  you  do  not  find  it  lie  with  a  good  Body  on  the  Paper ;  the 
Thicknefs  of  a  Shilling,  when  dried  hard,  is  fufficient :  When  your  Piece  is  thus  pre¬ 
pared,  take  the  Feathers  off  from  your  Bird,  as  you  ufe  them,  beginning  always  at 
the  Tail,  and  Points  of  the  Wing,  and  working  upwards  to  the  Head,  obferving  to 
cover  that  Part  of  your  Draught  with  the  Feather,  that  you  take  from  the  fame  Part 
in  your  Bird,  letting  them  fall  one  over  another  in  their  natural  Order  1  you  muft 
prepare  your  Feathers  by  cutting  off  the  downy  Pa^t  that  is  about  their  Bottoms;  and 
the  larger  Feathers  mufi;  have  the  Infides  of  their  Shafts  fiiaved  off'  with  a  Knife  to 
make  them  lie  flat ;  the  Quills  of  the  Wings  muft  have  their  inner  Webs  clipped  of, 
that  in  laying  them  the  Gum  may  hold  them  by  their  Shafts.  When  you  begin  to 
lay  them,  take  a  Pair  of  Steel  Pliers  to  hold  the  Feathers  in,  and  have  fome  Gum- 
Water,  not  too  thin,  and  a  large  Pencil  ready  to  moiften  the  gum’d  Ground-work 
by  little  and  little  as  you  work  it,  then  lay  your  Feathers  on  the  moiften’d  Parts, 
which  mufi:  not  be  waterifii,  but  fomething  tacky  or  clammy  to  hold  the  Feathers, 
You  fhould  prepare  a  Parcel  of  fmall  leaden  Weights,  in  the  form  of  Sugar-Loaves, 
which  you  may  cafi;  in  Sand,  by  firfi:  making  Holes  in  its  Surface  with  a  pointed 
Stick  :  Thefe  Weights  will  be  neceffary  to  fet  on  the  Feathers  you  have  newly  layed 
on  to  hold  them  to  the  Gum,  till  they  are  dry  and  fixed ;  but  you  muft  be  cautious 
leafi;  the  Gum  come  through  the  Feathers,  for  it  not  only  fmears  them,  but  dries  to 
the  Bottoms  of  the  Weights,  and  you  will  be  apt  to  puli  -  off  the  Feathers  with  the 
Weights,  which  will  diforder  your  Work:  When  you  have  wholly  covered  your 
Bird  with  Feathers,  you  mufi;  with  a  little  thick  Gum  flick  on  a  Piece  of  Paper  cut 
round,  of  the  Bignefs,  and  in  the  Place  of  the  Eye,  which  you  mufi  colour  like  the  Eye 
of  the  Bird.  When  the  whole  is  dry,  drefs  the  Feathers  round  the  Out-line  that  may 
chance  to  flare  a  little,  and  rectify  what  may  be  mended  in  any  other  Part ;  then  lay  a 

S  2  &  T  Sheet 


(  122,125,124  ) 

5heet  of  clean  Paper  on  it,  and  on  that  a  heavy  Book,  or  fome  fuch  Thino-  to 
prefs  it :  After  which  it  may  be  preferved  in  a  Frame  covered  with  a  Glafs. 

I  fliall  add  to  this  Receipt  another  that  may  ferve  to  decorate  the  former,  which  is 
a  Way  to  take  the  Figures  of  Butterflies  on  thin  gum’d  Paper,  which  may  be  cut  out 
and  ftuck  into  other  Pictures  by  Way  of  Embellifhment. 

Take  Butterflies,  or  Field  Moths,  either  thofe  catched  abroad,  or  fuch  as  are  taken 
in  Caterpillars,  and  nurfed  in  the  Houfe  till  they  be  Flies,  clip  off  their  Wings  very 
clofe  to  their  Bodies,  and  lay  them  on  clean  Paper,  in  the  Form  of  a  Butterfly  when 
flying,  then  have  ready  prepared  Gum  Arabic,  that  hath  been  fome  time  diffolved  in 
Water,  and  is  pretty  thick if  you  put  a  Drop  of  Ox  Gall  into  a  Spoonful  of  this, 
it  will  be  better  for  the  Ufe,  temper  them  well  with  your  Finger,  and  fpread  a 
little  of  it  on  a  Piece  of  thin  white  Paper,  big  enough  to  take  both  Sides  of  your 
Fly when  it  begins  to  be  clammy  under  your  Finger,  the  Paper  is  in  proper  Order 
to  take  the  Feathers  from  the  Wings  of  the  Fly ;  then  lay  the  gum’d  Side  on  the 
Wings,  and  it  will  take  them  up,  then  double  your  Paper  fo  as  to  have  all  the  Wings 
between  the  Paper,  then  lay  it  on  a  Table,  preiTing  it  clofe  with  your  Fingers  j  and 
you  may  rub  it  gently  with  fome  fmooth  hard  Thing;  then  open  the  Paper,  and 
take  out  the  Wings,  which  will  come  forth  tranfparent:  The  Down  of  the  upper  and 
under  Side  of  the  Wings,  flicking  to  the  gum’d  Paper,  form  a  jufl  Likenefs  of  both 
Sides  of  the  Wings  in  their  natural  Shapes  and  colours. 

The  Nicety  of  taking  off  depends  on  ajull  degree  of  Moifler  of  the  gum’d 
Paper,  for  if  it  be  too  wet,  all  will  be  blotted  and  confufed,  and  if  too  dry,  your 
Paper  will  flick  fo  fafl  together,  that  it  will  be  torn  in  Separation.  When  you  have 
opened  your  gum’d  Papers,  and  they  are  dry,  you  mufl  draw  the  Bodies  from  the 
natural  Ones,  and  paint  them  in  Water-Colours;  you  mufl  take  a  Paper  that  will 
bear  Ink  very  well  for  this  Ufe,  for  a  finking  Paper  will  feparate  with  the  Wet,  and 
fpoil  all. 

I  never  heard  that  ever  thefe  Things  were  known  or  pra6tifed  in  Fn gland,  before 
I  difeovered  and  performed  them  myfelf,  fo  I  hope  they  will  be  acceptable  to  the 
Curious.  Infefts  bring  to  my  Mind  a  very  curious  and  laborious  Work  now  perform¬ 
ing  at  Nuremberg  in  Germany,  by  Auguftus  'John  Roflel,  which,  for  its  Accuracy,  and 
flridl  keeping  to  Nature,  far  exceeds  any  Thing  of  the  Kind  that  has  fallen  under 
my  Obfervation  :  It  is  now  publiflaing  Monthly  by  the  Author,  who  has  far  advanced 
in  the  Work.  I  have  feen  what  Numbers  are  publiflaed,  fo  finely  engraved  and  co¬ 
loured  by  the  Author,  that  they  almofl  equal  original  Drawings. 

It  is  now  Time  to  clofe  this  Volume  of  Birds  1  believe  I  fliall  publifh  nothing 
farther,  but  if  I  fliould  continue  to  amufe  myfelf  on  any  Natural  Subjecfl,  it  will  fo  far 
difihr  from  this  Work,  that  it  will  require  quite  another  Title,  and  will  be  no  Part 
of  what  is  already  publifhed. 


A  C  A  T  A- 


'(  *25  ) 


A 

CATALOGUE 

O  F  T  H  E 


NAMES  of  the  BIRDS,  &(. 

Defcribed  in  this  W  O  R  K  j 

In  LATIN  and  ENGLISH. 


f,  A  QUILA,  cauda  alba,, 
rtcana, 

2.  Vultur  elegans. 

3.  Falco,  Americaniis^  maculatus. 

4.  Falco,  niger,  Americanus. 

5.  Pfittacus,.  niger,  Madagafcarenps, 

6.  Pfittacus,  minimus,  viridis  &  ruber, 

Indiciis. 

j,.  Cuculo  affinis,  avis  Criflata,  Touraco, 
didla. 

8.  Ifpida,  major,  Africana. 


9.  Ifpida,  ex  albo  &  nigro  varius.  Per- 
Jica.. 

10.  Ifpida,  Surinamenjis^  binis  plumis  in 
_  cauda  longiffimis. 

11.  Ifpida?,  minores,  Indicao 

12.  Otis  Arabica. 

13.  Phafianus  Brafilienjls. 

14.  Columba,  Indie  a  ^  alls  viridibus, 

15.  Columba,  macroura. 

16.  Columba,  fufea,  undulis  obfcuriorl- 

bus  tranfverfis  notata,. 


W 


HITE  Tailed  Eagle, 


King  of  the  Vultures*. 
Spotted  Hawk  or  Falcon. 

Black  Hawk  or  Falcon. 

Black  Parrot  from  Madagalcar. 
Smallefi;  Green  and  Red  Indian  Paro¬ 
quet. 

Touraco 


8.  Great  Kingfifiier  from  the  Ri^ver' 

Gambia. 

9.  Black  and  White  Kingfijlier.. 

10.  Swallow-tail’d  Kingfifiiers.. 


1 1.  Little  Indian  Kingfifiiers.. 

1 2.  Arabian  Bufiard,. 

13.  Quan  or  Guan. 

14.  Green-wing’d  Dove, 

15.  Long-tail’d  Dove. 

16.  Tranfverfe  flriped  barred  Dove,. 

U  17.-  Sturnu.,^ 


ly.  Sturniis,  hidicus,  Bontii. 

Sturnus,  hidicuSi  minor. 

i8.  Merula,  caerulea,  Pajj'er  SoUtarius 
didtus. 

ng.  Sturnus,  Shienjis^  niger. 

20.  Merula  rofea,  Aldrovandi. 

21.  Certhia,  Surinmyienjis^  csrulea. 

Parus,  niger,  capite  fulvo. 

22.  Mufcicapa,  csrulea,  ventre  rubro, 

23.  Fringillago  viridis.,  capite  rubro. 

24.  Rubecula,  dorfo  c$ruieo. 

25.  Mufcicapa  viridis,  capite  nigro. 
Mufcicapa  viridis,  capite  csruleo. 

26.  Certhia,  fufca,  minor. 

27.  Hirundo,  riparia,  maxima. 

,28.  Ruticilla,  giitture  caeruleo, 

29.  Ruticilla,  dorfo  cinereo. 

30.  Ficedula,  tertia  Aldrov.  mas  &  fce- 

mella. 

31.  Oenanthe,  fulva  j  mas  &  fcemella. 

32.  Avis  mellivora,  major,  rubra,  ma- 

croura. 

Avis  mellivora,  minor,  fulva. 

33.  'Avis  mellivora,  viridis,  macroura. 

34.  Avis  mellivora,  macroura,  capite 

nigro. 

35.  Avis  mellivora,  ventre  albo. 

Avis  mellivora,  viridis  &  cseruleus. 

36.  Avis  mellivora,  ventre  nigro  5  mas  & 

foemella. 

37.  Avis  mellivora,  minor,  criftata. 

38.  Avis  mellivora,  minor,  gutture  ru¬ 

bro  ;  mas  cum  foemella. 

39.  Garrulus  ruber,  Surinamenfis. 

40.  Paffer,  Indicus^  fufcus,  ventre  ex  albo 

&  nigro  pundlato. 

,41.  Coccothrauflies,  Sinenjis,  cinereus,  mas. 

42.  Ejufdem  foemella. 

43.  Palfer,  SinenJisj  fulvus;  mas  &  foe¬ 

mella. 

44.  Linaria,  Mexicana,  capite  flavo. 

45.  Grus,  Indica^  major. 

46.  Tringa,  pedibus  Fulic®, 

4_7..  Pluvialis,  Indicus^  pedtore  nigro, 


Minor  or  Mino; 

1 8;  Solitary  Sparrow, 

19.  Chinefe  Starling  or  Black  Bird. 

20.  Rofe  or  Carnation-colour’d  Ouzel, 

21.  Blue  Creeper.  , 

Golden-headed  Black  Tit-moufe. 

22.  Red-belly’d  Blue-Bird. 

23.  Red-headed  Green-Finch, 

24.  Blue  Red-Breafl. 

25.  Green  Black-cap  Fly-catcher. 
Blue-headed  Green  Fly-catcher. 

26.  Little  Brown  ajid  White  Creeper, 

27.  Greateft  Martin  or  Swift. 

28.  Blue-throat  Redftart. 

29.  Grey  Redfcart. 

30.  Cold  Finch,  Cock  and  Hen, 

31.  Red  or  Ruifet  colour’d  Wheat-Ear. 

32.  Long-tail’d  Red  Humming  Bird. 

Little  Brown  Humming  Bird. 

33.  Long-tail’d  Green  Humming  Bird. 

34.  Long-tail’d  Black-cap  Humming  Bird. 

35.  White-Belly ’d  Humming  Bird. 
Green  and  Blue  Humming  Bird. 

36.  Black-belly ’d  Green  Humming  Birds, 

Cock  and  Hen, 

37.  Crefled  Humming  Bird. 

38.  Red-throated  Humming  Bird,  with, 

its  Hen. 

39.  Red  Bird  from  Surinam. 

40.  Gowry  Bird. 

4 1 .  Padda  or  Rice  Bird,  the  Cock. 

42.  ------  Hen. 

43.  Chinefe  Sparrows,  Cock  and  Heni, 

44.  Yellow-headed  Linnet. 

45.  Greater  Indian  Crane, 

46.  Coot- footed  Tringa. 

47.  Black-breafled  Indian  Plover. 

48.  Galli- 


(  126  ) 

I/' 


{  127  ) 


48.  G?\\in\x\2L  BrafiHenfisj' di<fta, 

Alis  cornubus  donatis. 

49.  Penguin. 

50.  Columba  Grcenlandicay  Hollandis 

didla. 

51.  Cervus,  Rangifery  Grcenlmdicus. 

52.  Hyftrix,  Canadenjis^ 

53.  Buteo  cinereus. 

54.  Lanius  fulvus,  criflatus. 

55.  Lanius  minimus. 

56.  Lanius,  cauda  forcipata. 

57.  Cuculus  fulvus,  maculatus. 

58.  Cuculus  IndicuSy  niger. 

59.  Cuculus  IndiciiSy  fufcus,  maculatus. 

60.  Otus  Americaniis. 

61.  Aluco  albus,  diurnus. 

62.  Ulula,  Accipetri  afiinis. 

63.  Caprimulgus  minor,  Americanus. 

64.  Pica  Brafilienfis. 

65.  Picus,  viridis,  capite  cinereo. 

66.  Phafianus,  Sinen/isy  albus  emigre  cae- 

rulaeus  5  cum  fcemella,  colore  fulvo. 

67.  Phafianus,  alis;&  cauda,  oculatis. 

68.  Phafianus,  variis  coloribus  fplcndidus. 

69.  Foemellae  precedentium,  67  &  68. 

70.  Perdix  ruffa,  Africana. 

71.  Urogallus,  minor,  Americanus, 

72.  Lagopus. 

73.  Otis,  mas. 

74.  Otis  foemella. 

75.  Columba,  maculls  triquetris  notata. 

76.  Turtur,  IndicuSy  fufcus. 

77.  Idterus,  LidiciiSy  capite  nigro> 

78.  Turdus  cinereus  minor. 

79.  Mufcicapa,  Indicay  viridis. 

80.  Ruticilla,  minor,  Americana. 

81.  Certhia,  minor,  ex  albo,  nigro  &: 

rubro  varia. 

82.  Rubicilla,  fufea,  major. 

83.  Rubicilla,  fufea,  minima. 

Parus  niger  &  fulvus. 

84.  Chloris,  Indiciis, 


48.  Spur-winged  W^er  Hem 

49.  Penguin. 

50.  Spotted  Greenland  Dove. 

5  r .  Greenland  Buck. 

52^  Porcupine  from  Hudfon’s  Bay. 

53.  Alh-colour’d  Buzzard. 

^4.  Crellied  Red  or  RulTet  Butcher-Bird. 

54.  Lead  Butcher-Bird. 

56.  Fork’d-taifd’  Indian  Butcher-bird. 

57.  Great  Spotted  Cuckow. 

38.  Black  Indian  Cuckow. 

59.  Brown  and  Spotted  Indian  Cuckow, 

60.  Great  Horned  Owl. 

61.  Great  White  Owl. 

62.  Little  Hawk  Owl. 

63.  Whip-Poor-Will  or  Lefler  Goat- 

Sucker. 

64.  Toucan  or  Brafilian  Pye. 

65.  Grey-headed  Green  Wood-pecker. 

66.  Black  and  White  China  Pheafant, 

the  Cock  ‘with  the  Hen, 

6y.  Peacock  Pheafant. 

68.  Painted  Pheafant. 

69.  Peacock  Pheafant,  the  Hen. 

And  the  Hen  of  the  Painted  Pheafant. 

70.  Red-legg’d  Partridge  from  Barbary. 

71.  Brown  Spotted  Heathcock. 

72.  White  Partridge. 

73.  Buftard,  the  Cock. 

74.  Hen  Buftard. 

75.  Triangular  Spotted  Pigeon, 

76.  Brown  Indian  Dove. 

77.  Black-headed  Indian  ICtenis. 

78.  Lefter  Mock-Bird. 

79.  Green  Indian  Fly-catcher. 

80.  Small  American  Redftart. 

81.  Little  Black,  White  Red  Indian 

Creeper. 

82.  Greater  Bull-Finch. 

83.  Little  Brown  Bull-Finch. 

Black  and  Yellow  Manakin, 

84.  Indian  Green-Finch, 


85,  Emberiza 


('  * 

8  5-  Emberi^  fufea,  Americana. 

86.  Fringilla,  Africana,  macroura. 

87.  Porphyrio. 

88.  Albato^a,  maxima. 

89.  Petrella,  magna,  fufea. 

90.  Petrella,  media,  maculata. 

Petrella,  minor,  five  vulgaris. 

9 1 .  Mergulus,  melanoleucos,  roftro  acu- 
to  brevij  mas  6c  fuemella. 

92.  Onocratalus. 

93.  Onocratalus,  Americaniis. 

94.  Penguines,  ex  Oceano  Aujirali,  pedi- 
bus  nigris., 

95.  Mergus,' major,  pedore  rubro. 

96.  Podicipes  albus  6c  fufeus. 

Podicipes,  auritus. 

97.  Colymbus,  caudatus,  gutture  rubro. 

98.  Anas,  major,  albus  6c  fufeus,  cum 
fcemella. 

99.  Anas,  fufeus,  macula tus. 

1 00.  Anas,  minor,  albus  6c  fufeus. 

1 01.  Anas,  criftatus,  elegans. 

102.  Querquedula,  Sinenfsy  elegans. 

103.  Urfulus,  Lupo  affinis,  Americanus. 

104.  Marmota,  Americanus. 

505.  Ibidis,  MgyptiaciSy  roftrum. 

'  Avis  mellivora,  minima,  cum  ovo. 


8  ) 

^85.  Schomhurgheri 

86.  Red-breafted  Long-tall'd  Fineh. 

87.  Purple  Water  Hen. 

88.  Albatrofs. 

89.  Great  Black  Peteril. 

90.  White  and  Black  Spotted  Peterih 
Little  Peteril. 

9 1 .  Small  Black  and  White  Divers. 

92.  Pelican. 

93.  Pelican  of  America.- 

94.  Black^footed  Penguins.. 

95.  Red-breafted  Goofander. 

96.  Black  White  Dobchick. 
Eared  Dobchick. 

97.  Red- throated  Ducker  or  Loon,’ 

98.  Great  Black  and  White  Duck^ 

Male  and  Female. 

99.  Dufky  and  Spotted  Duck. 

100.  Little  Black  White  Duck. 

1 01.  Summer  Duck  of  Gatesby. 

102.  Chinefe  Teal. 

103.  .Qmck-hatch  or  Wolverene. 

104.  Monax  or  Marmotte  of  America.' 
1.05.  ’The  Bill  of  the  ^Egyptian  Ibis,. 

Leaft  Humming  Bird.. 


FINIS, 


i 


M- 


.-5 


t 


■  =5&''  s 

.  %■ '  f^:  ■ 


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