GOLD-VENTED THRUSH. 225 
sex, however, was not noted. In 1843 Dr. Burkitt sent 
the specimen to Wm. Thompson, Esq., for exhibition im 
the Natural History Section of the British Association, 
then about to hold a meeting at Cork, and the subject is 
noted in the Published Report of the thirteenth meeting, 
in that part of the volume devoted to the Transactions of 
the Sections, page 71. 
Dr. Burkitt has most kindly allowed me the use of his 
bird for my work on the present occasion, and the figure 
at the head of this subject, and the description to be added, 
were taken from this British killed specimen. 
But little is known of the habits of this species by the 
various authors whose names and works are here quoted. 
By Le Vaillant, who has given a coloured representation 
of the male, it is stated that Klaas, the faithful companion 
of his travels, shot this species on the banks of the Groot- 
vis river, in the Caffre country. This example, which was 
found to be a male, was accompanied by another of the 
same species, but Le Vaillant’s fellow-traveller having only 
a single barrelled gun, the other bird, which was probably 
a female, escaped while he was reloading. They after- 
wards saw no more birds of this species, not even the 
female in question, although they searched the district in 
which the male was killed for several days. 
Dr. Latham, in the ‘fifth volume of his General History, 
when noticing this species, observes, that in the collection 
of Sir J. Anstruther are several drawings of this bird, 
where it is called the Bulbul (Nightingale) of Calcutta ; 
but the bird thus referred to by Dr. Latham, which is 
figured in Brown’s Illustrations of Zoology, plate 31, 
though somewhat resembling Le Vaillant’s bird, is yet a 
different species, as comparisons of the figures and descrip- 
tions appear to me to prove. These African and Indian 
VOL. I. Q 
