.no (ECONOMY 



excellent norifhment, as ail of this kind live 

 in the water, before they get their wings. 



The woodcock Fn. 141. hves in England in 

 winter, and departs from thence ^t the coming 

 on of fpring after they have paired. 



Tht fw allow -fair d fneldrake Fn. 96. crofTes 

 Sweden in April, and does not flop till fhe has 

 reached the White fea. 



The cohlers awl Fn. 137. goes every autumn 

 into Italy. 



The ar^ic driver Fn. 121. goes into Germany 

 every fpring, and autumn. 



The mijfel thriifh Fn. 189. fills our woods in 

 the fpring, but leaves us in the winter. 



The pied chaffinch Syf Nat. 10. 97. i. during 

 the winter, being obliged to leave the alps *, 

 haftens into Sweden, and often into Germany. 



The gttlls vifit Spain and Italy. 



The raven ' goes into Schoncn. 



By thefe migrations birds alfo become ufe- 

 ful to many different countries, and are diftri- 

 buted over almoft all the globe. I cannot for- 

 bear exprefling my admiration here, that all 



* The Author means the Northern alps. 

 * U have tranflated the word corvus by raven, becaufe 



Linnaeus does not mention the carrion crow at all, cither in 

 the Faun. Succ. nor in the Syft Nat. before the late edition. 



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