UPUPA EPOPS, Linn. Hoopoe. Upupa Epops, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 37. —— vulgaris, Pall. Zoog. Ross.-Asiat., tom. i. p. 432. macrorhyncha, Landb. Syst. Aufz. der Vog. Wiirtemb. bifasciata, Brehm, Vog. Deutschl., p. 215, tab. 15. fig. 2. Tue Hoopoe, a bird of great beauty, stands alone in our avifauna, unallied to any other in structure, habits, or economy. Its distribution is very general, it being found in Europe, Africa, India, and China. England is therefore not its true home, although it is frequently seen here; France, Southern Germany, and the countries bordering the Mediterranean, however, are within the limits of its range. At Constantinople it is a bird of the market shambles, being eaten by the Turks; and it is also one of the commonest of the birds of Egypt. Those which resort to Europe in summer are probably migrants from Morocco and North-eastern Africa, seeking a more invigorating climate in which to breed and rear their young ; and the few that visit England are individuals that have extended their search beyond their natural area. The Hoopoe generally comes to us singly, seldom in pairs, and still more rarely in greater numbers. The period of arrival is uncertain, but it is usually between April and September. We should naturally suppose that this visitor from a warm climate would not proceed very far into the high northern Jatitudes ; yet such is the case; for many examples have occurred in Scotland, and Mr. H. E. Dresser informs me that, according to Pastor Sommerfeldt, it has been killed in Finland, within the arctic circle; in Cunningham’s ‘ Ladakh,’ it is stated that a Hoopoe was seen on the western side of the Lanak pass, at an elevation of about 16,500 feet. The occurrence of the bird in these widely distant localities shows how far it sometimes wanders from its native home. In India, China, and most eastern countries the Hoopoe is as common as in Egypt. Doubtless many of my readers would like to know where in England they could get a glimpse of this extraordinary bird, whether it is to be looked for iu the open fields, in the hedgerow, or in the shrubberies ; this however I cannot tell them. Were it one of our regular migrants, it would follow the laws which govern the movements of such birds, and its arrival in any given district might be relied upon with certainty ; as it is, the lady who takes an airing in her carriage may see it by the roadside, the farmer may raise it in his clover-ley, the beachman may be startled by its appearance on the denes by the seaside, or the game- keeper may observe it during his daily rounds ; wherever it may appear, it is unexpected ; and a person may pass a long life without ever seeing one. There are counties, it is true, where it occurs more frequently than in others; these are Kent, Sussex, Suffolk, and Norfolk, and usually in the month of May. In some seasons it appears in tolerable abundance, in others not at all. In disposition it.is as tame and fearless as in appear- ance it is showy and attractive. In the hedgerow, or on the wooden fence, it stands out in bold relief, con- spicuously different from all surrounding birds. On the ground it moves about with ease and much gracefulness, erecting its beautiful crest on the least excitement, prying here and there for insects and their larve, and probing with its long forceps-like mandibles into the soft earth for a worm ora beetle. If disturbed, it merely tops the nearest hedge, with a flight more like that of a large butterfly than a bird, and settles again in the next field. Its appearance, unhappily, is only the forerunner of its death; for probably every Hoopoe that visits our islands is shot; and in many instances its stuffed skin is handed down from father to son as a trophy obtained in former years. To enumerate all the recorded instances of its occurrence in our island would answer no useful end; but I may mention two of its appearances near the metropolis, which came under my own cognizance. L. Sulivan, Esq., shot one in the pleasure-garden of his residence, Broom House, Fulham; and iy late excellent friend J. Meadows Rendel informed me that on looking out of his dressing-room window at his house in Ken- sington Palace Gardens one spring morning, he saw a Hoopoe running about the grass-plot, continually raising and depressing its crest, and that it continued to do so while he was dressing ; it must have been an interesting sight to one so capable of appreciating it. Disturbed by a cat or some other cause, the bird took flight to a neighbouring garden ; and Mr. Rendel did not see it again. My good friend Admiral Mitford writes from Hunmanby Hall, near Scarborough, under the date of May 14, 1859, ‘“ We have lots of Hoopoes : as many as nine were seen together.” Mr. Stevenson has given a list of the examples that have come under his notice in Norfolk and Suffolk during the last fourteen years, amounting to sixty-five in number; of these thirty-four occurred in April, twenty-five in May, one in August, and five in September.