1822. John Latham, `General History of Birds,' vol. v. p. 124:
"Austral Thrush. [A full description.] Inhabits New South
Wales."
[Latham describes two other birds, the <i>Port Jackson Thrush</i> and the <i>Harmonic Thrush</i>, and he uses different scientific names for them. But Gould, regarding Latham's specimens as all of the same species, takes all Latham's scientific and vernacular names as synonyms for the same bird.]
1848. J. Gould, `Birds of Australia,' vol. ii. pl. 74:
"The Colluricincla harmonica is one of the oldest known of the
Australian birds, having been described in Latham's `Index
Ornithologicus,' figured in White's `Voyage' and included in
the works of all subsequent writers."
<hw>Port-Macquarie Pine</hw>. See <i>Pine</i>.
<hw>Post-and-Rail Tea</hw>, slang name for strong bush-tea: so called because large bits of the tea, or supposed tea, float about in the billy, which are compared by a strong imagination to the posts and rails of the wooden fence so frequent in Australia.
1851. `The Australasian' (a Quarterly), p. 298:
"<i>Hyson-skin</i> and <i>post-and-rail</i> tea have been superseded by Mocha, claret, and cognac."
1855. G. C. Mundy, `Our Antipodes,' p. 163: