ESSAY III. 



Of Birds of Passage, Sec, 



CHAP. L 



T T would be very proper for all travellers 

 I into foreign parts, to take notice of what 

 birds and beafts they find, and at what fea- 

 fons of the year they find them, and at what 

 times they difappear, and when they appear 

 again -, that fo we may in time give a tolerable 

 account of the places to which birds and beafts 

 of paffage go that are found with us, and in 

 other countries, only at certain feafons of the year. 

 Many may think, perhaps, that there are no 

 beafts of pafTage, but I have been informed by 

 a perfon of reputation, who now refides in one 

 of the Englifli forts in Hudfon's-Bay, that the 



deer 



