LETTER XXVIII. 

 To Thomas Pennant, Esq. 



I WAS much gratified by your communicative let- 

 ter on your return from Scotland, where you spent, 

 I find, some considerable time, and gave yourself 

 good room to examine the natural curiosities of that 

 extensive kingdom, both those of the islands, as well 

 as those of the highlands. The usual bane of such 

 expeditions is hurry ; because men seldom allot them- 

 selves half the time they should do: but, fixing on a 

 day for their return, post from place to place, rather 

 as if they were on a journey that required despatch, 

 than as philosophers investigating the works of na- 

 ture. You must have made, no doubt, many dis- 

 coveries, and laid up a good fund of materials for a 

 future edition of the British Zoology ; and will have 

 no reason to repent that you have bestowed so much 

 pains on a part of Great Britain that perhaps was 

 never so well examined before. 



It has always been matter of w^onder to me that 

 fieldfares, which are so congenerous to thrushes and 

 blackbirds, should never choose to breed in England: 

 but that they should not think even the highlands 

 cold and northerly, and sequestered enough, is a cir- 

 cumstance still more strange and wonderful. The 

 ring-ousel, you find, stays in Scotland the whole year 



round ; so that we have reason to conclude that those 



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