27O CHIMING THRUSH. 



THE Abyssinian Thrush is said to feed on palm- 

 tree flowers, and also to cat grapes, when in sea- 

 son : it is the size of the ^Ethiopian Thrush : the 

 upper parts of its plumage are brown ; the quills 

 and tail deepest, and edged with pale : the throat 

 is pale brown ; and the under parts of the body 

 fulvous yellow : the legs are black. 



CHIMING THRUSH. 

 (Turd us Campanella.) 



Tv.fuscus, sultus uropygioque rnfo-fuk-us, gula alba, pileo ge- 

 nisque albis nigro-maculatis, superciliis strigaque pone oculos 

 nigris. 



Brown Thrush, beneath and rump reddish orange; with the 

 throat white ; top of the head and cheek white, spotted with 

 black ; supercilia and stripe behind the eyes black. 



Turdus Campanella. Lath. Ind. Orn. I. 35^. 121. 



Turdus tintinnabulatus. Gmel. Syst. Nat. 1. 826. 



Le Carilloneus. Buff. PI. Enl. 700. f. l.Buf. Hist. Nat. Ois. 

 4. 478. 



Chiming Thrush. Lath. Gen. Si/n. 3. 83. 114. 



IT is described to be four inches in length : 

 the upper mandible is black, and the lower 

 white : the top and sides of the head are white, 

 sprinkled with black : above the eye is a broad 

 streak of black, and a narrower one behind the 

 eye, joining the former at its lowest pan- : the! 

 back, wings, and tail, are brown ; the 

 in colour : the wing-coverts are sp 



