120 THRUSH. 



brown line down the shaft of each feather; body above greenish 

 yellow; chin full yellow; the rest beneath pale ash, tinged with 

 olive, and marked down the shafts with obsolete dusky streaks; 

 under wing coverts, and quills olive-green, within dusky brown ; 

 tail the same, four inches and a half long, rounded at the end, the 

 wings reach to the middle of it; legs longish, brown. 

 Inhabits New South Wales.— M. de Fichtel. 



146.— RESTLESS THRUSH. 



Turdus inquietus, Ind. Orn. Sup. p. xl. 



Restless Thrush, Gen. Syn. Sup. ii. 181. Shaw's Zool. x. 263. 



SHAPE slender. Bill black, rather long, and a trifle curved at 

 the point ; tongue sharp ; plumage, on the upper part of the body, 

 black, on the under white ; tail a trifle forked at the end ; legs black. 



Inhabits New-Holland. Said to be a restless species. 



147.— DILUTE THRUSH. 



Turdus dilutus, Ind. Orn. Sup. p. xl. 



Dilute Thrush, Gen. Syn. Sup. ii. 182. Shaw's Zool. x. 208. 



BILL straight, bluish ; head, neck, and rump, blue-grey ; back 

 and wings pale brown; under parts of the body bluish white ; tail 

 dusky, pale brown; legs bluish. 



Inhabits New-Holland. 



148.— HARMONIC THRUSH. 



Turdus harmonicus, Ind. Orn. Sup. p. xli. 



Harmonic Thrush, Gen. Syn. Sup. ii. 182. Shaw's Zool.x. 217. 



LENGTH ten inches. Bill half an inch, stout, and black, notched 

 at the tip ; plumage above cinereous brown ; over the eye a ferru- 



