to have an instinctive consciousness of the danger to which his beauty subjects him ; nevertheless they will 
frequently build their little nest and rear their young in the most populous places. Several broods are reared 
annually in the Botanic Garden at Sydney, and I saw a pair busily employed in constructing their nest in a 
tree close to the door of the Colonial Secretary's Office in that town. ‘The short and rounded wing 
incapacitates it for protracted flight, but the amazing facility with which it is enabled to pass over the 
surface of the ground fully compensates for this deficiency; this mode of progression is scarcely to be 
called running, but is rather a succession of bounding hops, performed with great rapidity: while thus 
employed its tail is carried perpendicularly or thrown forward over the back ; in fact, except during flight, 
this organ is rarely, if ever, carried horizontally. 
The breeding-season continues from September to January, during which period at least two, if not 
three, broods are reared; the young of one being scarcely old enough to provide for themselves, before 
the female again commences laying : independently of rearing her own young, she is also the foster-parent 
of the Bronze Cuckoo (Chalcites lucidus), a single egg of which species is frequently found deposited in 
her nest ; but by what means, is, as in the case of the European Cuckoo, unknown. 
The nest, which is dome-shaped, with a small bole at the side for an entrance, is generally constructed of 
grasses, lined with feathers or hair: the site chosen for its erection is usually near the ground, in a 
secluded bush, tuft of grass, or under the shelter of a bank, The eggs are generally four in number, of a 
delicate flesh-white, sprinkled with spots and blotches of reddish brown, which are more abundant, and 
form an irregular zone at the larger extremity: they are eight lines long by five and a half broad, 
The song ts a hurried strain impossible to describe, but somewhat resembling that of the Wren of 
Europe, a bird to which the AZa/ur? also assimilate in many of their actions. 
The stomach is muscular, and the food consists of insects of various kinds, collected on the ground, the 
trunks of fallen trees, ete. 
The male in summer has the crown of the head, ear-coverts and a lunar-shaped mark on the upper part 
of the back light metallic blue; lores, line over the eye, occiput, scapularies, back, rump and upper tail- 
coverts velvety black; throat and chest bluish black, bounded below by a band of velvety black; tail deep 
blue, indistinctly barred with a darker hue and finely tipped with white; wings brown ; under surface bufly 
white, tinged with blue on the flanks; irides blackish brown ; bill black; feet brown. 
The female has the lores and a circle surrounding the eye reddish brown ; upper surface, wings and. tail 
brown; under surface brownish white ; bill reddish brown ; feet fleshy brown. 
The Plate represents two males and a female with the nest, the former engaged in feeding a young 
Cuckoo. 
