480 TROPICAL WILD LIFE IN BRITISH GUIANA 



nical name is Thri/othorus corai/a. The coimiion wren 

 hannts the tangles npon the savannalis, as well as the big 

 forest. It is a homely bird. The (luadrille bird, perhaps the 

 finest songster in the world, may be heard in Truata Forest. 

 Mv first meeting with this bird was in the Upper ^lassa- 

 rnni. Its voice-prodnetion is a perfect art; I know of no 

 bird with a sweeter note, not even the nightingale, nor the 

 black-cap of Kurope. AVhen one has heard this bird, the 

 other two wrens mentioned, the local thrnsh, the troupial, 

 and the kadouri — to mention some only of onr sweet song- 

 sters — one no longer believes the traveler's yarn that the 

 tropical conntries have birds of bright phimage but no 

 birds of song. 



I do not class the bunyahs as songsters ; but I must not 

 forget to mention that colonies of them may be found upon 

 the river batiks, their nests being suspended from trees over- 

 hanging the water. 



This haphazard catalogue will afford some idea of the 

 birds to be found in the district. Travellers may walk miles 

 over the savannahs and through the forests and report that 

 few are the birds to be seen and heai'd — noisy parrots, ma- 

 caws and kiskadees, vultures, doves and pigeons. If they 

 walk they w'ill see little more. Those w4io desire to see and 

 to hear, must learn to stand or to sit still. Half an hour's 

 patience-exercise will be amply repaid : it is astonishing how 

 many forms of wild life reveal themselves to the silent 

 w^atcher. They seem to spring to life as by the magic of a 

 fairy's w^and. Creatures which are preyed upon learn that 

 their safety consists in sitting still, when danger threatens. 

 This instinct, exercised in the very face of an enemy, causes 

 that inaction which some would attribute to hypnotism. Any 

 boxer knows that he must watch his opponent's eyes, so as 

 to be able to tell when and w^here his next blow will fall. 

 There is no need for fancy theories w^ith regard to birds and 

 beasts and reptiles. 



