Part I. Of SMr. 
Trees, ferve quietly to fufpend. him. Whereas, as Mr. Wray 
hath alfo rightly obferved, (a) not being Mufcular, it is im- 60 Wii- 
poffible they ihould be of any fuch ufe. His hooked Claws ^ h §hb ' 0f; 
ihew him to be a Bird of Prey 3 and he ordinarily flys at 
Green-Finches, and other little Birds, and feeds on them, (b) 
The Tamacenfes fhoot them down with Darts, (c) c c ) ibid/ 
Two more MANUCODIAT A'S of the fame 
Species. 
The GREAT RED and BLEW PARROT. 
Pfittacus Erythrocyaneus. All the great kind called alfo 
MACCAW and Cockatoone. It was fent hither from 
Java. See his Defcription in Willonghbys Grnithologia, 
There are of thefe greater, the middlemen 1 called Popin- 
jayes, and the leffer called Perroqueets, in all above twenty 
forts. Their more remarkable Parts,are their hooked Bills, 
whereby they catch hold of Boughs, and help to raife 
themfelves up in the climbing of Trees. Their broad 5 
thick, and mufcular Tongues, for which they are called 
aiiSpawoyAa^oj, and by which they are the better enabled to 
fpeak, and to rowl their meat from fide to fide under the 
edges of their Bills: and their Feet, which, likethofe of 
the Woodpecker, have two Toes before and two behind, 
with which they bring their meat to their mouths 3 and 
that after an odd way , fc. by turning their foot out- 
ward, (c/y U) Wii 
The P arret only, faith Scaliger, («?) with the Crocodile, l ™§ hh - Ot * 
moves the upper Jaw : Yet the fame is affirmed of the (e) fcxetdh 
Hippopotamus, by Columnar of the Lizard, by Worniius 5 2 l 6 * & :l ° 
and of the Phdtnicopter, by Cardan. Which confirms 
what I have faid under the Defcription of the Skeleton of 
a Crocodile, and in what fenfe it is abfurdly faid of them 
all. In their Cheeks, faith Pifo, (/) in each Noftril, and ^ 
on the top of their Heads, in a certain Tumor, there lies, ' ' ' 
about Auguft, a thick Worm 3 all which, in a little time, 
fall out of their own accord, without any fign left of their 
ever being there. They are a gregarious fort of Birds, (g) (g> 
They breed very numeroufly in both the Indies, In Bar* 1 
bados, fly in flocks like Clouds. In Calechut they are forced 
to fet people to watch their Rice-Fields, lean 1 they fhould (h) Gefne . 
fpoil them, (h) The flelh of their Chickens eats juftlike 
a out ofXjjAois 
Kgeon. (/) . • *™ 
I The 
