67 
Shrikes: 4. The pied and 5. spotted Flycatchers; roomxi. 
6. Rose Dressel: 7. The black Ouzle; 8. The Nat. Hist. 
ring, 9. missel, 10. redwing, 11. singing , and 12. 
Fieldfare Thrushes: 13. The European Water - 
ouzle: 14. The yellow Waterhammer: 15. The 
white and 16. gray Wagtails: 17. The Dartford 
Songbird: 18. The Whiterumped Wheatear: 19. 
The stone and 20. whin Chats: 21. The European 
Redbreast: 22. The Blackcap Ficedule, often 
named the Welsh or Mock Nightingale, and 23. 
The lesser Ficedule or lesser White-throat: 24. 
The hedge Dunnock, or as it is improperly named 
Hedge Sparrow: 25. The Nightingale Philomele: 
26. Tire Grasshopper, and 27. reed Sedgebirds: 
28. The Sedge Willowbird: 29. The Common and 
Kruka Whitethroats: 30. The Common Gold- 
crest, the smallest of the British Birds, and a 
beautiful whitish variety of the same Bird: 31. 
Tire common, 32. field, and 33. Dusky Pipets, that 
have been confounded with the Larks, which 
belong to another family, &c. &c. 
In the third family (Fringilladas) are arranged 
those with a more or less conic beak, such as, 
the Larks', The Titmice', The Buntings: The 
Sparrows: The Finches: The Linnets: Gross - 
beaks: Bullfinch: Crossbeak. 
In the fourth family (Corvidae) are placed, the 
Stareling, showing its changes of plumage, amongst 
which the Solitary Thrush of Montagu is included ; 
the 
