The Scottish Naturalist. 299 



difficulty in ascertaining the real authorship of works bearing 

 such pseudonyms as, or than, in the case of those which are 

 simply anonymous. The same remark applies to works the 

 name of whose author is given to us only in the form of initials. 

 " Stonehenge," the writer of a" series of works comparable with 

 those of " Idstone," — such as 



(/) "The Horse." 1862— 

 is now known to be J. H.Walsh, F.R.C.S., presently or formerly 

 Editor of " The Field." 



(u) "Maunder's Treasury of Natural History." Last 

 edition, by Cobbold. 



(v) " Captain Wolf, and other Sketches of Animal Bio- 

 graphy." Seeley, Jackson, & Halliday. 



II. Articles in Reviews, Magazines, and other Serials. 



(a) " Cruelty to Animals," an excellent, temperate 



article, taking a general review of the whole subject. 

 "Cornhill Magazine," February 1874. 



(b) " The Boundary between Man and the Lower 



Animals." " Quarterly Journal of Science," January, 



i375- 



(c) " Animal Depravity." Same Quarterly, October, 1875. 



(d) " Dogs and their Diet." " Once a Week," Septem- 

 ber 30, 187 1. 



(e) " The Philosophy of Birds' Nests." Same serial, 



June 24, 187 1. 

 (/) " Ralphos," a Raven. Same serial, October 1 4, 1 87 1. 



" Once a Week " is a London illustrated weekly of the 

 same character as " Chambers's Journal " or " All the Year 

 Round," — containing, like both, occasional popular articles on 

 Animal Sagacity. 



(g) "Dogs at Home, on Sale, on Show, and in Hos- 

 pital." " All the Year Round," 1876. 



(h) " The Agricultural Ant of Texas." "Science Gossip," 

 January, 1868. 



(i) " Our Winnie " — (a pet Hare). Same serial, April, 



1873. 

 (k) " The Tasmanian Devil." "Spectator," July 9, 187 1. 



(/) " The Indifference of Animals to Speculative Truth." 



Same serial, November 26, 1870. 



( To be continued. ) 



