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1845. E. J. Wakefield, `Adventures in New Zealand,' c. i.
p. 228:
"The pukeko is of a dark-blue colour, and about as large as a pheasant. The legs, the bill, and a h.o.r.n.y continuation of it over the front of the head, are of a bright crimson colour.
Its long legs adapt it for its swampy life; its flight is slow and heavy, resembling that of a bittern."
1848. J. Gould, `Birds of Australia,' vol. vi. pl. 70:
"Porphyrio Bellus, Gould, Azure breasted Porphyrio; Swamp-Hen, Colonists of Western Australia."
1888. W. L. Buller, `Birds of New Zealand,' vol. ii. p. 79:
[A full description.]
1886. T. Heney, `Fortunate Days,' p. 50:
"Swamp mahogany's floor-flowered arms."
1833. C. Sturt, I Southern Australia,'vol. i. c. i. p. 53:
"Light brushes of swamp-oak, cypress, box and acacia pendula."
1847. J. D. Lang, `Phillipsland,' p. 257:
"Its banks (Murrumbidgee) are fringed with the beautiful swamp-oak, a tree of the Casuarina family, with a form and character somewhat intermediate between that of the spruce and that of the Scotch fir, being less formal and Dutch-like than the former, and more graceful than the latter."
1865. Rev. J. E. Tenison-Woods, `History of the Discovery and Exploration of Australia,' vol. i. p. 324:
"A stream, whose winding channel could be traced by the particularly dark verdure of the swamp-oak (Casuarina paludosa) on its banks."
1866. Miss Parkes, `Poems,' p. 40:
"Your voice came to me, soft and distant seeming, As comes the murmur of the swamp-oak's tone."
1870. F. S. Wilson, `Australian Songs,' p. 100:
"Softly the swamp-oak Muttered its sorrows to her and to me."
1883. C. Harpur, `Poems,' p. 47:
"Befringed with upward tapering feathery swamp-oaks."
1847. L. Leichhardt, `Overland Expedition,' p. 60:
"A Centropus phasianellus (the swamp-pheasant of Moreton Bay) was shot."
1881. A. C. Grant, `Bush Life in Queensland,' vol. i. p. 116:
"Far down the creek, on one of the river-oaks which grow in its bed, a swamp-pheasant utters its rapid coocoo-coo-coo-coo- coo-cook."
1887. R. M. Praed, `Longleat of Kooralbyn,' c. xvi. p. 102:
"The gurgling note of the swamp-pheasant."
1890. C. Lumholtz, `Among Cannibals,' p. 94:
"The bird Centropus, which is common in all Queensland, is found here in great numbers. Although it really is a cuckoo, the colonists call it the `swamp-pheasant,' because it has a tail like a pheasant. It is a very remarkable bird with stiff feathers, and flies with difficulty on account of its small wings. The swamp-pheasant has not the family weakness of the cuckoo, for it does not lay its eggs in the nests of other birds. It has a peculiar clucking voice which reminds one of the sound produced when water is poured from a bottle."
1888. W. L. Buller, `Birds of New Zealand,' vol. i. p. 60:
"These beds of rushes which form blind water-courses during the winter season, are dry in summer and are then a favourite resort for the Swamp-Sparrow as this bird is sometimes called."
Ibid. vol. ii. p. 255:
"The melancholy cry of the Fern-bird is so general and persistent that its nick-name of Swamp Sparrow is not undeserved."
The river upon which Perth, Western Australia, is situated, is called the Swan River, and the colony was long known as the Swan River Settlement. It has expanded into Western Australia, the emblem of which colony is still the Black Swan.
Since 1855 the Black Swan has been the device on the postage stamps of Western Australia.
82 A.D. (circiter). `Juvenal, Sat.' vi. 164: "Rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cycno."
1700 (circiter). J. Locke, in `Johnson's Dictionary' (9th edition, 1805), s.v. Swan:
"The idea which an Englishman signifies by the name Swan, is a white colour, long neck, black beak, black legs, and whole feet, and all these of a certain size, with a power of swimming in the water, and making a certain kind of noise."
1789. Governor Phillip, `Voyage,' p. 98:
"A black swan, which species, though proverbially rare in other parts of the world, is here by no means uncommon ... a very n.o.ble bird, larger than the common swan, and equally beautiful in form ... its wings were edged with white: the bill was tinged with red."
1790. J. White, `Voyage to New South Wales,' p. 137: