8o OUR SUMMER MIGRANTS. 



name from Linnaeus, who spelt the word ' titys' 

 as did Gesner ; but the best classical authorities, 

 Stephanus, Porson, and Passow, consider ' titis ' 

 to be right. This originally meant a small chirp- 

 ing bird, and is possibly cognate with the first 

 syllable of our /zVmouse and ^zVlark." After the 

 opinion expressed by such authorities, it may ap- 

 pear somewhat presumptuous on my part to ofter 

 a suggestion; but there is yet another explanation, 

 which has apparently been overlooked. Might 

 not the word " iiikys" (more correctly " tithus") 

 be derived from the Greek adjective nflof, 6»)', Aok, 

 which has the same signification as nfiao-of, tha^ 

 is, " reared up in the house, domesticated." 

 Compare the domestic hens of Dioscorides, T.fiaJ 

 opi/iGff. The term " domesticated" would be well 

 applied to the Black Redstart, which is a very 

 familiar bird, frequently perching on house-tops 

 and garden walls, and building in holes and 

 crannies in the neighbourhood of man's 

 dwelling. 



