158 THRUSH. 



One of these, in the collection of Mr. Bullock, measured four 

 inches and a half. Bill as before ; top of the head to the eye black, 

 down the middle a white streak, the same over the eye ; back dusky, 

 with darker markings ; lower part and rump ferruginous brown ; 

 wing coverts black, with white spots ; beneath from the chin white ; 

 sides of the breast mixed with black ; sides over the thighs, and 

 under tail coverts ferruginous ; legs pale brown. We suspect this to 

 be the male of the Chiming Species. 



211— BLACK- WINGED THRUSH. 



Turdus Bambla, Lid. Orn. i. 360. Gm. Lin. i. 827. Buf. iv. 479. PL enl. 703. 2. 

 Black-winged Thrush, Gen. Syn. iii. 84. Shaw's Zool. x. 308. 



LENGTH five inches and a half. Bill straight, a trifle curved 

 at the tip, and black ; the upper parts of the head, body, and rump, 

 mottled rufous brown ; the under parts pale ash-colour, mottled with 

 dusky ; wings black, with a white band across them ; tail short, half 

 an inch only in length, and dusky ; legs blackish brown. 



Inhabits Cayenne, where it is rare. Manners unknown. 



212.— JAMAICA THRUSH. 



Turdus Jamaicensis, Ind. Orn. i. 328. Gm. Lin. i. 809. 

 La Grive blanche et nolratre, Voy. d'Azura, iv. No. 80 ? 

 Jamaica Thrush, Gen. Syn. iii. p. 20. Shaiv's Zool. x. 179. 



SIZE of our Blackbird. Bill stout, brown; head brown; chin 

 and fore part of the neck white, dashed with streaks of brown ; lower 

 part of the neck plain white; breast cinereous; from thence to the 

 vent white ; upper parts of the body dark ash ; quills and tail brown ; 

 legs brown. 



