In the account of the H. Reinwardti given in the first edition of this Monograph, I stated that I was in¬ 
debted to my late valued friend Temminck for an example of the young, a figure of which is given in the 
accompanying Plate, and, as illustrating the change the bird undergoes between youth and maturity, will 
not be uninteresting. It will be seen that although, in this immature state, it exhibits a similarity to the 
adult, particularly in the colours of the back and tail, it differs in the markings of the wings and in the 
rufous-brown tint of the breast. 
The Plate represents a male and a young bird, of the size of life. The Plant is the Medinilla Javensis. 
