/^ S Ata/x.^ 



PEACOCK PHEASANT.— Po;;(;)(a(ro?l UrijiolcinU. 



SO called in remenilirance of the ill-fated Argus of mythology, whose hundred eyes never 

 slept simultaneously until cliarmed by the magic lyre of Mercury. 



This magnificent l>ird is remarkalile for tlie ver\' great l(?ngth of its tail-feathers and 

 the extraordinary development of the secondary feathers of the wings. While walking 

 on tlie ground, or sitting on a bough, the singular Irngth of tlie feathers is not very 

 striking, but when the bird spreads its wings, as sliov.-n in the smaller figure in the back- 

 ground, they come out in all their beauty. As miglit be supposed from the general 

 arrangement of the plumage, the bird is by no means a good flier, and when it takes to 

 the air, only flies for a short distance. In running, its wings are said to be efficient 

 aids. 



Although tlie Argus is hardly larger than an ordinaiy fowl, the plumage is so greatly 

 developed that its total length measures more than five feet. The head and back of the 

 neck are covered with short brown feathers, and the neck and upper part of the breast 

 are warm chestnut-brown covered with spots of yellow and black, and similar tints 

 are formed on the back. The tail is deep chestnut, covered with white spots, each spot 

 being surrounded with a black ring. When tlie bird chooses, it can raise the tail, so that 

 it stands boldly in the air between the wings and is partially spread. The secondaries of 

 tlie wings are most wonderful e.\am]5les of plumage, and would require many pages to 

 descrilie them fully. Suffice it to say tJiat the gradations of jetty black, deep rich brown, 

 orange, fawn, olive and white are so justly and boldly arranged as to form admirable studies 

 for the arti.st, and totally to baffle description. 



In one feather now before me tliere are seventeen large " eyes" on the outer web, eacli 

 being surrcinnded with a ring of jetty black, tlien with a dash of chocolate within the 



