DRYMOICA FASCIOLATA.— Smith. 
Aves.— Plate CXI Fig. 2. Female. 
D capite cervice superne, interacapularibusque viridi-brurmeis ; dorso caudseque tectricibus supenonbus 
pallide cinnamomeis ; humerorum tectricibus pallide rubro-brunneis, albo-marginatis ; mento, guttere, 
pectore ventreque albis, nigro-brunno-fasciolatis ; capite parvo; rostro gracili versus apicem curvato. 
Longitudo e rostri apice ad basin caudse 3 unc. 2 lin ; caudffi 2 unc. 
Colour. — The upper surface of the head, the back, and sides of the neck, 
and the interscapulars, a colour intermediate between orange coloured 
brown and oil-green ; the back, the rump, and the upper tail coverts a tint 
intermediate between hyacinth-red and yellowish brown. Shoulder coverts 
light reddish brown with a tint of umber-brown, many of them broadly tipped 
with pale cream-yellow or dirty white ; primary quill coverts umber-brown, 
secondary coverts umber-brown, broadly edged externally with the same 
colour as that of the back, the tips pale cream-yellow which forms an oblique 
bar of that colour on each wing. Quill-feathers brownish red, the outer vanes 
toward their base edged narrowly with honey-yellow, towards and at tips 
with dirty white. Sides of head speckled brown and rufous white ; chin and 
throat pure white, variegated with short, narrow, transverse umber-brown 
bars ; breast and anterior part of belly sienna-yellow variegated with short 
curved umber-brown bars; posterior portion of belly, flanks, vent, and under 
tail coverts rusty ochre-yellow, the latter darkest. Tail feathers light reddish 
brown with a tint of green, darkest immediately behind the narrow white 
apex. Legs, toes, and claws, buff-orange shaded with light brownish red, 
the legs and toes tinted with flesh-red. The upper mandible, and the lower 
towards its point, liver-brown, the latter towards its base sienna-yellow. 
Form, &c.— Head small, body moderately robust, wings rather large for 
the size of the bird, rounded, and when folded reach to nearly the middle of 
the tail, the first quill-feather about half the length of the second, the second 
slightly shorter than the third, the third nearly as long as the fourth, which 
is 'the "longest; the tertiaries nearly as long as the longest of the primaries. 
Tail fan shaped, the feathers rather silky, their points semicircular. Bill 
