244 
membrane, and an intestine of moderate length, with very small coecal appendages. 
The form of the wings and tail shews that the flight must be powerful and sus¬ 
tained, similar to that of the Redwing and the Fieldfare; and the feet, although 
fitted for hopping on the ground as well as for gliding among branches, are, per¬ 
haps, better adapted for the latter purpose. 
Although the Golden Oriole has occurred in several counties in England, and 
in a few instances in Ireland, no authentic case of its occurrence in Scotland has 
been recorded, at least to my knowledge. The birds in the museum of the Uni¬ 
versity of Edinburgh, mentioned by Mr. Selby as having furnished subjects for 
his drawings, and as having been shot on the Pentland Hills, were brought from 
France by the late Mr. Wilson, janitor to that university. 
REMINISCENCES OF THE RHINE; 
ORNITHOLOGICAL AND ENTOMOLOGICAL. 
( Concluded from page 207 )• 
Cerambyx Textor .—With its long horns, scrambling and out-stretched legs, 
large size, and dark-black colour, the uninitiated observer would start with disgust, 
exclaiming, “ what a frightful creature !” if an Entomologist exultingly presented 
him with this fine insect. And so it is, to those who judge of these and 
some other similar tenantry of the insect world, under the weight of early associa¬ 
tions or prejudices: but to the Entomologist, its apparent deformities assume a 
different aspect; and in each limb, articulation, and joint, and specific character, 
clearly and strongly developed as they are, he pronounces it to be one of the most 
attractive specimens of insect perfection. With such feelings I welcomed the slow 
march and dignified attitude of one of these fine Cerambyces emerging from the 
sod on the side of a pathway near Aix-la-Chapelle. I secured him, as well as cir¬ 
cumstances would permit, in folds of paper, but in the course of the following night 
he escaped to undergo, doubtless, the melancholy fate of being disposed of like a 
common Black Beetle by the thoughtless chambermaid, who might find him pe¬ 
rambulating my bed-room floor next morning. 
Green Locust (Gryllus viridissima ).—I found only one specimen of this 
conspicuous insect, on the stem of a Willow, near Strasbourg. I confined it in a 
tin box with two or three other insects, one of which was a Carabris of some 
size; when, to my astonishment, on opening the box on the following day, I found 
