Marsh, is a beautiful marine garden of this kind : liere the stonecrop is in perfection, Interspersed among 
acres of purple thrift and foxglove, growing on beds of stone, sand, and shells many miles in extent. This 
interesting part of our coast, with the prominent lighthouse at the apex, and the town of Lydd at the base 
of the triangle, and numerous freshwater pools, frequented in summer by thousands of Black-headed 
Gulls, in the centre, will be duly appreciated by every naturalist who has an opportunity of visiting it. 
As is the case with the other Terns, the sexes of the Common species are alike in colour; but they differ 
considerably in size, the female being much smaller than her mate. Both have jet-black crowns in summer 
— a colour which is confined to the nape in winter. At all seasons the beautiful orange tint of their hills, 
feet, and legs affords a conspicuous contrast to the delicate hues of their plumage. 
I have more than once spent a pleasant hour watching this species fishing in the canals of Holland, 
where they are evidently regarded as friends, since they are never molested by any one. I have even seen 
them in the very streets of Leyden performing their usual elegant turns and actions within a few feet of the 
houses, or dropping like a stone into the dirty water, whence they generally rose with a glittering fish, 
which they bore away to their young on the beach at Scheveling, the sand-hills on the coast, or 
the margin of some of the inland waters of that flat marshy country. That it does breed inland as well as 
on the coast is proved by the following passage from Thompson’s ‘Natural History of Ireland’: — “When 
at Fort Lough, a small lake or tarn on the north-west of Donegal, on the 29th of June 1832, I was 
conveyed in a ‘ corragh ’ to its two islands, where this species, with several of its nests containing eggs, was 
observed. The nests were placed among loose stones, and all composed of the common reed (Ariindo 
phragmitis) and Equiseta, both of which grow on the islet. On visiting Ram’s Island, in Lough Neagh, on 
the 15th of June 1833, for the purpose of ascertaining what species of Gulls and Terns breed on the 
narrow strip of land adjoining it, I found the Tern to be the Common one, of which there were considerable 
numbers ; but having killed three, required as specimens, they were no further disturbed. Several of their 
nests were seen, none of which contained more than three eggs — the usual number. I looked particidarly 
to these with reference to the determination of the species from the eggs alone, as we can frequently find 
them when the birds will not come sufficiently near for identification. Some consider the egg to be rather 
larger and more round in form than those of the Arctic Tern, and these were certainly about the roundest 
Tern’s eggs I had ever seen. This character may therefore be generally correct, though the difference 
between the eggs of the two species Is by no means well defined. Sir William Jardine has remarked that 
the Common Tern seems to prefer, for a breeding-place, a shingly beach or low-lying ground to rocky 
islands. My observation agrees with this as a general remark ; but it is far from being of universal 
application. The Common Tern is more cosmopolite than any of the others, breeding in localities of various 
kinds, both about fresh water and the sea.” 
The eggs are yellowish stone-colour, spotted and blotched with dark gi-ey and reddish brown ; they are 
one inch and eight lines in length by one inch and two lines in breadth. 
The Plate represents a female in the breeding-plumage, with two young birds about three days old, all of 
the natural size. The principal plants are the Stonecrop {Sedum AtigUcwn) and reduced masses of the 
Common Thrift {Armeria maritmd) of our garden-borders. 
