Class II. RED G O D W I T. 



and the edges of the feathers with a pale cinereous 

 brown : the middle of the belly is white, marked 

 fparingly with fimilar fpots. 



The lefTer coverts of the wings are of a light 

 brown : the greater tipt with white : the fhafts and 

 lower interior webs of the greater quil-feathers are 

 white : the exterior webs and upper part of the in- 

 terior black : the upper half of the fecondary fea- 

 thers are of the fame color ; the lower half white : 

 the coverts, and the lower part of the feathers of 

 the tail are white ; the upper part black ; the 

 white gradually leffening from the outmoft fea- 

 thers on each fide : the legs are black, and four 

 inches long: and the thighs above the knees are 

 naked for the fpace of an inch and three-quarters. 



Thefe birds vary in their colors, foine that we 

 have feen being very flightly marked with red, or 

 only marbled with it on the bread : but the re- 

 flected form of the bill is ever fufficient to deter- 

 mine the fpecies. This is. not a very common fpe- 

 cies in England; we have known it to have been 

 {hot near Hull-, and have once met with it in a 

 poulterer's fhop in London. Mr. Edwards has fi- 

 gured a bird from Hud/on 9 s Bay, that feems related 

 to this i but the difference in the colors of the 

 tail, forbids our placing it among the fynonyms. 

 And Linnaus omitting a defcription of that part, 

 in his Fauna Suecica, obliges us to queftion whe- 

 ther it be the fame with the above. 



La 



