6 ORNITHOLOGICAL RAMBLES. 



the entire county. After traversing this district, 

 where he would be more inclined to fancy himself 

 in the heart of Germany than within forty miles 

 of London, he reaches a more elevated country, 

 where highly-cultivated farms and an occasional 

 elm tree denote the presence of a richer soil ; and 

 this is again succeeded by a wide tract of ferrugi- 

 nous sand, assuming the most striking forms of 

 liill and valley, or spreading into open heaths. 

 Nothing can exceed the picturesque beauty of 

 certain portions of this district; eminences clothed 

 with heather and gorse and crowned with Scotch 

 fir and holh', enclose valleys intersected by clear 

 running brooks, whose course, here rapid and 

 noisy, rushes over rocks and ridges of sandstone ; 

 there taking a sudden turn, and stealing away 

 in a deep and silent current, half undermines 

 the overhanging banks, ungratefully exposing the 

 gnarled roots of the old oak trees, that seem to 

 stretch their branches in a protecting attitude 

 over the stream; altogether strongly reminding 

 one of those delicious bits of sylvan scenery which 

 are scattered, with such a lavish hand, through 

 the magic pages of Bewick. 



Then come the Downs, the famous South 

 Downs, which White of Selborne was wont to call 

 "a magnificent chain of mountains," stretcliing 

 across the county in a south-easterly direction. 



