94 VIM AGO. 



form in members of such importance, become of 

 value in arranging the species according to their af- 

 finities. The tail consists of fourteen feathers. 



In accordance with the structure of their feet, 

 they are the constant inhabitants of woods, where 

 they subsist upon berries and fruits. In disposition 

 they are wild and timorous. Our first plate repre- 

 sents a species common in many parts of the east. 

 It is the 



