tell ; but it would be worth the obfervation of 

 any curious Englifhman refiding in that coun- 

 try ; therefore I lhall fet down their names^ 

 viz. 



Of this number the Wheat-Ear, the Green- 

 Wren, the Houfe-S wallow and Wry-neck, are 

 found in England in fummer, and all of them 

 in the fouthern parts of Europe, where I be- 

 lieve they are birds of pafiage alfo. All thefe I 

 have met with in parcels of birds fent from Ben- 

 gal -, and if any perfon of good obfervation in 

 India could difcover that thefe birds are abfent 

 there v/hile prefent with us, and prefent there 

 whilft abfent here, it v/ould anfwer the queftion, 

 whither and in what manner do thefe birds 

 pafs ? 



The Greater Redflart, 



The Witwal, 



The Wheat-Ear, 



The Small-Green-Wren, 



The Houfe- Swallow, 



The Bee Eater, 



The Wry-neck, 



Merula Saxatilîs, Aldrov. 

 Ifterus, Plinii, 

 Oenanthe or Vitiflora, 

 Regulus non criftatus, 

 Hiriindo domeftica> 

 Merops, 



lynx or Torquilla. 



