" And from the loud resounding rocks below, " Dashed in a cloud of foam, it sends aloft " A hoary mist, and forms a ceaseless shower.'' THOMPSON. Here flights of birds are frequently hovering and feeding upon the sides of the mountain, ]0 FALLS OF THE CAVER Y probably upon the smaller fish precipitated down the stream. When the river is quite full, it falls in one unbroken cataract to the vale below, and its sudden violence, as it rushes down this deep descent, is beautifully contrast- ed with the calmness of its subsequent gliding through a valley, formed by the steep banks of two mountains overhung with trees of great variety, whilst the brushwood and long grass of the bottom afford shelter to tigers, elks, hogs, and all the feathered tribe of game. Here I am told our worthy commander in chief Sir R. O'Callagan had, last season, the satisfaction of shooting a fine elk. The fall on the southern branch of the river is called Bir Chuckee, and is about two miles from Gungan Chuckee ; a good road connecting the two. The channel of the river here is spread out to a magnificent expanse, -and its stream, which is divided into seven distinct ca-