220 FLYCATCHER. 



108— NEW-HOLLAND FLYCATCHER. 



LENGTH six inches and a half. Bill slender, bent at the point, 

 pale at the base, and dusky at the tip ; plumage above dusky, shafts 

 of the feathers white ; beneath dusky and white clouded ; wings 

 deep ash-colour, the second, third, and fourth quills, white on the 

 outer edges, making a long streak on the wing ; tail black, and 

 appears as if it were doubly concave at the end ; all but the two 

 middle feathers tipped with white ; legs dusky. 



Inhabits New-Holland. 



109— PACIFIC FLYCATCHER. 



LENGTH eight inches. Bill broad at the base, and dusky ; 

 plumage above glossy black, beneath from under the eye wholly 

 white ; quills brown ; tail a little rounded ; the wings reach about 

 to the middle of it. 



Inhabits New-Holland. — From the drawings of Mr. Lambert. 



110— SOLITARY FLYCATCHER. 



Motacilla solitaria, Solitary Warbler, Lewin's N. Holt. Birds, p. 3. pi. iii. 



LENGTH five inches. Bill scarcely half an inch long, dusky 

 brown; plumage above brownish grey; wings and tail brown ; chin 

 whitish in the middle ; the rest of the under parts ferruginous chest- 

 nut ; paler, and inclining to orange on the throat, but mottled with 

 ferruginous ; thighs brown ; tail one inch and a quarter in length, 

 hollowed out a little in the middle, and nearly black ; legs brown. 



