Cuar. I.] LIST OF CEYLON MAMMALIA. 73 
says the pious Calvinistic chaplain, “in no way militates 
against the truth of her story.”! 
Finally Valentyn winds up his proofs, by the accumu- 
lated testimony of Pliny?, Theodore Gaza, George of 
Trebisond, and Alexander ab Alexandro, to show that 
mermaids had in all ages been known in Gaul, Naples, 
Epirus, and the Morea. From these and a multitude of 
more modern instances he comes to the conclusion, that 
as there are “ sea-cows,” “ sea-horses,” and “sea-dogs ;” 
as well as “sea-trees” and “ sea- flowers ” which he him- 
self had seen, what grounds in reason are there to doubt 
that there may also be “ sea-maidens ” and “sea-men !” 
List of Ceylon Mammalia. 
A list of the Mammalia of Ceylon is subjoined. In 
framing it, as well as the lists appended to the other chap- 
ters on the Fauna of the island, the principal object in 
view has been to exhibit the extent to which the Natural 
History of the island had been investigated, and collec- 
tions made up to the period of my leaving the colony in 
1850. It has been considered expedient to exclude a 
few individuals which have not had the advantage of a 
direct comparison with authentic specimens, either at 
Calcutta orin England. This will account for the omis- 
sion of anumber that have appeared inother catalogues, 
but of which many, though ascertained to exist, have not 
been submitted to this rigorous process of identification. 
The greater portion of the species of mammals and 
pirds contained in these lists will be found, with suitable 
' Varentyn, Beschryving, $c., 2 Nat. Hist. 1. ix. c. 5, where 
p. 333. Pliny speaks of the Nereids, 
